Operands returns the SSA values used by an instruction.
Referrers returns the SSA instructions that use a value, for
some values. These will be used for SSA renaming, to follow.
R=iant, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7312090
into separate package. This allows this code to be shared
with the search package without the need for these two to use
the same tables.
Adjusted various files accordingly.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7213044
The lowering of ast.RangeStmt now has three distinct cases:
1) rangeIter for maps and strings; approximately:
it = range x
for {
k, v, ok = next it
if !ok { break }
...
}
The Range instruction and the interpreter's "iter"
datatype are now restricted to these types.
2) rangeChan for channels; approximately:
for {
k, ok = <-x
if !ok { break }
...
}
3) rangeIndexed for slices, arrays, and *array; approximately:
for k, l = 0, len(x); k < l; k++ {
v = x[k]
...
}
In all cases we now evaluate the side effects of the range expression
exactly once, per comments on http://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=4644.
However the exact spec wording is still being discussed in
https://golang.org/cl/7307083/. Further (small)
changes may be required once the dust settles.
R=iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7303074
This CL provides the rest of the SetCookies code as well as
some test infrastructure which will be used to test also
the Cookies method. This test infrastructure is optimized
for readability and tries to make it easy to review table
driven test cases.
Tests for all the different corner cases of SetCookies
will be provided in a separate CL.
R=nigeltao, rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7306054
Support reading pax archives and applying extended attributes
like long names, subsecond mtime resolutions, etc. Default to
writing pax archives for long file and link names.
Support reading gnu archives using the ././@LongLink extended
header for file name and link target.
Fixes#3300
R=dsymonds, dave, rogpeppe, remyoudompheng, chressie, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6700047
On Windows, CryptoAPI is finding an alternative validation path. Since
this is a little non-deterministic, this change disables that test
when using system validation.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7313068
By default, crypto/x509 assumes that users wish to validate
certificates for ServerAuth. However, due to historical reasons,
COMODO's intermediates don't specify ServerAuth as an allowed key
usage.
Rather NSS and CryptoAPI both allow these SGC OIDs to be equivalent to
ServerAuth.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7312070
Add benchmark for request parsing. Fixture data is taken from https://github.com/felixge/node-http-perf
% go version
go version devel +28966b7b2f0c Thu Feb 07 20:26:12 2013 -0800 linux/amd64
% go test -run=nil -bench=ReadRequest -benchtime=10s
PASS
BenchmarkReadRequest 2000000 9900 ns/op 61.71 MB/s 3148 B/op 32 allocs/op
ok net/http 12.180s
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, minux.ma, haimuiba
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7313048
On POSIX, '=' in key is explicitly invalid, and '\x00' in key/value is implicitly invalid.
R=golang-dev, iant, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7311061
With the new scheduler races in the tests are reported during execution of other tests.
The change joins goroutines started during the tests.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7310066
The problem happens when end=0, then end-1 is very big number.
Observed with the new scheduler.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7307073
It might be non-blocking, but it also might be blocking.
Cannot take the chance, as Accept might block indefinitely
and make it impossible to acquire ForkLock exclusively
(during fork+exec).
Fixes#4737.
R=golang-dev, dave, iant, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7309050
Before and after:
BenchmarkTrimSpace 20000000 81.3 ns/op
BenchmarkTrimSpace 50000000 58.0 ns/op
(most whitespace trimming is ASCII whitespace)
Same optimization appeared a handful of other places
in this file, but not here.
R=golang-dev, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7305063
This is necessary for systems that use select as the pollster,
such as Solaris (supported by gccgo). It corresponds to the
bool returned by AddFD. In general it's not clearly defined
what happens when a descriptor used in a select is closed, and
different systems behave differently. Waking up the select
will cause the right thing to happen: the closed descriptor
will be dropped from the next iteration.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7303056
deferred block. This makes hangs in the waiting code less likely
if a goroutine exits abnormally.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7306052
This CL is the first of a handful of CLs which will provide
the implementation of cookiejar. It contains several helper
functions and the skeleton of Cookies and SetCookies.
Proper host name handling requires the ToASCII transformation
from package idna which currently lives in the go.net
subrepo. This CL thus contains just a TODO for this issue.
R=nigeltao, rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7287046
Removes limit on maximum number of goroutines ever existed.
code.google.com/p/goexecutor tests now pass successfully.
Also slightly improves performance.
Before: $ time ./flate.test -test.short
real 0m9.314s
After: $ time ./flate.test -test.short
real 0m8.958s
Fixes#4286.
The runtime is built from llvm rev 174312.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7218044
Closing the inotify file descriptor can take over a second
when running on Ubuntu Precise in an NFS directory, leading to
the test error in issue 3132. Closing the event channel first
lets a client that does not care about the error channel move
on.
Fixes#3132.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7300045
This updates a bad reference to a method name in the example priority queue test.
The error was introduced in the example refactoring in rev. 2ea8f07b2ffe.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7279045
If a Handle's Write to a ResponseWriter fails (e.g. via a
net.Conn WriteDeadline via WriteTimeout on the Server), the
Server was blocking forever waiting for reads on that
net.Conn, even after a Write failed.
Instead, once we see a Write fail, close the connection,
since it's then dead to us anyway.
Fixes#4741
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7301043
This provides the mechanism to connect SPDY support to the http
package, without pulling SPDY into the standard library.
R=rsc, agl, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7287045
This CL adds TCPInfo struct to linux/386,arm.
It's already added to linux/amd64.
Note that not sure the reason but cgo godefs w/ latest gcc
translates a flexible array member in structures correctly,
handles it as a non-incomplete, non-opaque type, on Go 1.
This CL reverts such changes by hand for the Go 1 contract.
R=minux.ma, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7197046
Deadlines should be extended at the beginning of
a request, not at the beginning of a connection.
Fixes#4676
R=golang-dev, fullung, patrick.allen.higgins, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7220076
In cmd/go's 'go help testflag':
* Rewrite list of flags to drop test. prefix on every name.
* Sort list of flags.
* Add example of using -bench to match all benchmarks.
In testing:
* Remove mention of undefined 'CPU group' concept.
Fixes#4488.
Fixes#4508.
R=adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7288053
* Document Parse's zone interpretation.
* Add ParseInLocation (API change).
* Recognize "wrong" time zone names, like daylight savings time in winter.
* Disambiguate time zone names using offset (like winter EST vs summer EST in Sydney).
The final two are backwards-incompatible changes, but I believe
they are both buggy behavior in the Go 1.0 versions; the old results
were more wrong than the new ones.
Fixes#3604.
Fixes#3653.
Fixes#4001.
R=adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7288052
This only affects code (with exception of lookupProtocol)
that is only executed on older versions of Windows.
R=rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7293043
This CL also replaces similar loops in other stdlib
package tests with calls to AllocsPerRun.
Fixes#4461.
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002055
The spec mostly uses the term embedded.
It's too late to change the field name but at least fix the docs.
Fixes#4514.
R=golang-dev, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7235080
Impossible for us to check (without sleazily reaching into the
runtime) but at least document it.
Fixes#3800.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7268043
Change the stack unwinding code to compensate for the dynamic
relocation of symbols.
Change the gc instruction GC_CALL to use a relative offset instead of
an absolute address.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7248048
Everybody either gets confused and thinks this is
TrimLeft/TrimRight or does this by hand which gets
repetitive looking.
R=rsc, kevlar
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7239044
* Separate internal and external LockOSThread, for cgo safety.
* Show goroutine that made faulting cgo call.
* Never start a panic due to a signal caused by a cgo call.
Fixes#3774.
Fixes#3775.
Fixes#3797.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7228081
This is a backwards compatible API change that fixes broken code.
In Go 1.0, ReadFull(r, buf) could return either len(buf), nil or len(buf), non-nil.
Most code expects only the former, so do that and document the guarantee.
Code that was correct before is still correct.
Code that was incorrect before, by assuming the guarantee, is now correct too.
The same applies to ReadAtLeast.
Fixes#4544.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7235074
Someone found software that generates negative numbers for the RSA
modulus in an X.509 certificate. Our error messages were very poor in
this case so this change improves that.
Update #4728
Return more helpful errors when RSA parameters are negative or zero.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7228072
* Reject import paths of the form cmd/x/y.
* Reject 'go install' of command outside GOPATH
* Clearer error rejecting 'go install' of package outside GOPATH.
* Name temporary binary for first file in 'go run' list or for test.
* Provide a way to pass -ldflags arguments with spaces.
* Pass all Go files (even +build ignored ones) to go fix, go fmt, go vet.
* Reject 'go run foo_test.go'.
* Silence 'exit 1' prints from 'go tool' invocations.
* Make go test -xxxprofile leave binary behind for analysis.
* Reject ~ in GOPATH except on Windows.
* Get a little less confused by symlinks.
* Document that go test x y z runs three test binaries.
* Fix go test -timeout=0.
* Add -tags flag to 'go list'.
* Use pkg/gccgo_$GOOS_$GOARCH for gccgo output.
Fixes#3389.
Fixes#3500.
Fixes#3503.
Fixes#3760.
Fixes#3941.
Fixes#4007.
Fixes#4032.
Fixes#4074.
Fixes#4127.
Fixes#4140.
Fixes#4311.
Fixes#4568.
Fixes#4576.
Fixes#4702.
R=adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7225074
This adds a simple IntHeap example, and modifies the more complex
PriorityQueue example to make use of the index field it maintains.
Fixes#4331.
R=rsc, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7068048
ICU and collate package: ICU requires strings to be in FCD form.
Not all NFC strings are in this form, leading to incorrect results.
Change to NFD instead.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7201043
Handle return values from recvfrom correctly when the
kernel decides to not return an address.
Fixes#4636.
Fixes#4352.
R=rsc, mikioh.mikioh, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058062
If os.OpenFile holds ForkLock on files that block opens,
then threads that simultaneously try to do fork-exec will
get hung up (until the open succeeds). Blocked opens are
common enough on Plan 9 that protecting against fd leaks
into fork-execs means not being able to do fork-execs
properly in the general case. Thus, we forgo taking the
lock.
R=rsc, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7235066
An hostport of "[::1]" now results in the same error message
"missing port in address" as the hostport value "127.0.0.1",
so SplitHostPort won't complain about "too many colons
in address" anymore for an IPv6 address missing a port.
Added tests checking the error values.
Fixes#4526.
R=dave, rsc, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7038045
The JSON unmarshaller failed to allocate an array when there
are no values for the input causing the `[]` unmarshalled
to []interface{} to generate []interface{}(nil) rather than
[]interface{}{}. This wasn't caught in the tests because Decode()
works correctly and because jsonBig never generated zero-sized
arrays. The modification to scanner_test.go quickly triggers
the error:
without the change to decoder.go, but with the change to scanner_test.go:
$ go test
--- FAIL: TestUnmarshalMarshal (0.10 seconds)
decode_test.go:446: Marshal jsonBig
scanner_test.go:206: diverge at 70: «03c1OL6$":null},{"[=» vs «03c1OL6$":[]},{"[=^\»
FAIL
exit status 1
FAIL encoding/json 0.266s
Also added a simple regression to decode_test.go.
R=adg, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7196050
Binary data in mprof.goc may prevent the garbage collector from freeing
memory blocks. This patch replaces all calls to runtime·mallocgc() with
calls to an allocator private to mprof.goc, thus making the private
memory invisible to the garbage collector. The addrhash variable is
moved outside of the .bss section.
R=golang-dev, dvyukov, rsc, minux.ma
CC=dave, golang-dev, remyoudompheng
https://golang.org/cl/7135063
This change also resolves some issues with note handling: we now make
sure that there is enough room at the bottom of every goroutine to
execute the note handler, and the `exitstatus' is no longer a global
entity, which resolves some race conditions.
R=rminnich, npe, rsc, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6569068
Range access functions are already available in TSan library
but were not yet used.
Time for go test -race -short:
Before:
compress/flate 24.244s
exp/norm >200s
go/printer 78.268s
After:
compress/flate 17.760s
exp/norm 5.537s
go/printer 5.738s
Fixes#4250.
R=dvyukov, golang-dev, fullung
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7229044
Roll back CL making primitive type unmarshal faster,
because it broke the Unmarshal of malformed data.
Add benchmarks for unmarshal of primitive types.
Update #3949.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7228061
We explicitly spill all parameters to the frame during initial
SSA construction. (Later passes will remove spills.)
We now properly handle local Allocs escaping via Captures.
Also: allocate BasicBlock.Succs inline.
R=iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7231050
Useful for debugging of runtime bugs.
+ Do not print "stack segment boundary" unless GOTRACEBACK>1.
+ Do not traceback system goroutines unless GOTRACEBACK>1.
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7098050
Otherwise it's impossible to know how much data from the
json.Decoder's underlying Reader was actually consumed.
The old fix from golang.org/issue/1955 just added docs. This
provides an actual mechanism.
Update #1955
R=golang-dev, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7181053
Add 'math/big' to blacklist of packages that use shift
operations as yet unsupported by go/types.
(The failure was masked due to local bugfixes in my client.)
R=rsc, bradfitz, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7220057
This CL includes the implementation of Literal, all the
Value.String and Instruction.String methods, the sanity
checker, and other misc utilities.
R=gri, iant, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7199052
Added tests, using input data from strconv.ParseFloat.
Thanks to rsc for most of the test code.
math/big could use some good package-level documentation.
R=remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6930059
Mark candidate spans one GC pass earlier.
Move scavenger's code out from mgc0 and constrain it into mheap (where it belongs).
R=rsc, dvyukov, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002049
This is for SPARC64, a 64-bit processor that uses all 64-bits
of virtual addresses. The idea is to use the low order 3 bits
to at least get a small ABA counter. That should work since
pointers are aligned. The idea is for SPARC64 to set CNT_MASK
== 7, PTR_BITS == 0, PTR_MASK == 0xffffffffffffff8.
Also add uintptr casts to avoid GCC warnings. The gccgo
runtime code is compiled with GCC, and GCC warns when casting
between a pointer and a type of a different size.
R=dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7225043
It is now possible to run "go test -cpu=1,2,4 std"
successfully.
Fixes#3185.
R=golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7196052
net/http currently assumes that the response to a HEAD request
will always have a Content-Length header. This is incorrect.
RFC2616 says: "The HEAD method is identical to GET except that
the server MUST NOT return a message-body in the response. The
metainformation contained in the HTTP headers in response to a
HEAD request SHOULD be identical to the information sent in
response to a GET request. This method can be used for
obtaining metainformation about the entity implied by the
request without transferring the entity-body itself. This
method is often used for testing hypertext links for validity,
accessibility, and recent modification."
This means that three cases are possible: a Content-Length
header, a Transfer-Encoding header or neither. In the wild the
following sites exhibit these behaviours (curl -I):
HEAD on http://www.google.co.uk/ has Transfer-Encoding: chunked
HEAD on http://www.bbc.co.uk/ has Content-Length: 45247
HEAD on http://edition.cnn.com/ has neither header
This patch does not remove the ErrMissingContentLength error
for compatibility reasons, but it is no longer used.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7182045
This function is absolutely critical for clients such as
exp/ssa, and too complex for clients to duplicate.
As with CL 7200046, gri expressed in the doc below [gophers
only] before going on leave that he intended to expose such a
predicate, though his wording suggests as an interface method
of Type rather than a standalone function. (My preference is
for binary methods to be standalone; see "On Binary Methods",
Kim Bruce, 1995). In any case if he wishes to move it that's
easily accommodated by clients.
https://docs.google.com/a/google.com/document/d/1-DQ4fxlMDs9cYtnkKhAAehX6MArjOQyJsRXp-6kiJLA/edit#heading=h.k3bwja7xony9
R=iant, gri, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7203051
On Windows, crypto/x509 passes through to Windows's CryptoAPI
to verify certificate chains. This method can't produce a
SystemRootsError, so make sure we always skip the test on
Windows.
This is needed because testVerify is called in both
TestGoVerify and TestSystemVerify on Windows - one is for
testing the Go verifier, the other one is for testing the
CryptoAPI verifier. The orignal CL tried to sidestep
this issue by setting systemSkip to true, but that only
affected TestSystemVerify.
R=golang-dev, agl, snaury, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7185043
further to how (I believe) it will end up being.
It is nicer to separate search from sorting functionality. Collation needs tables that
are not needed by search and vice-versa. The common functionality is separated out
in the Weigher interface. As this interface is very low-level, it will be moved to
a sub package (colltab) in a next CL.
The types that will move to this package are Weigher, Elem, and Level. The addition
of Elem allows for removing some of the duplicate code between collate and collate/build.
This CL also introduces some stubs for a higher-level API for options. The default
proposed options are quite complex and require the user to have a decent understanding
of Unicode collation. The new options hide a lot of the complexity.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058051
Fixes the fork-exec/wait race condition for ForkExec
as well, by making it use startProcess. This makes the
comment for StartProcess consistent as well.
Further, the passing of Waitmsg data in startProcess
and WaitProcess is protected against possible forks
from outside of ForkExec and StartProcess, which might
cause interference with the Await call.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7128059
BenchmarkString before:
11990 ns/op 1621 B/op 73 allocs/op
Using bytes.Buffer:
8774 ns/op 1994 B/op 40 allocs/op
I also tried making a version of escape() that writes directly to the
bytes.Buffer, but it only saved 1 alloc/op and increased CPU time by
about 10%. Didn't seem worth the extra code path.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7182050
Parse("file:///foo") previously returned a URL with Scheme "file"
and Path "///foo". Now it returns a URL with Path "/foo",
such that
&URL{Scheme: "file", Path: "/foo"}.String() == "file:///foo"
This means that parsing and stringifying the URL "file:/foo"
returns "file:///foo", technically a regression but one that only
affects a corner case.
Fixes#4189.
R=bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7135051
This proposal adds two methods to *testing.T, Skip(string) and Skipf(format, args...). The intent is to replace the existing log and return idiom which currently has 97 cases in the standard library. A simple example of Skip would be:
func TestSomethingLong(t *testing.T) {
if testing.Short() {
t.Skip("skipping test in short mode.")
// not reached
}
... time consuming work
}
Additionally tests can be skipped anywhere a *testing.T is present. An example adapted from the go.crypto/ssh/test package would be:
// setup performs some before test action and returns a func()
// which should be defered by the caller for cleanup.
func setup(t *testing.T) func() {
...
cmd := exec.Command("sshd", "-f", configfile, "-i")
if err := cmd.Run(); err != nil {
t.Skipf("could not execute mock ssh server: %v", err)
}
...
return func() {
// stop subprocess and cleanup
}
}
func TestDialMockServer(t *testing.T) {
cleanup := setup(t)
defer cleanup()
...
}
In verbose mode tests that are skipped are now reported as a SKIP, rather than PASS.
Link to discussion: https://groups.google.com/d/topic/golang-nuts/BqorNARzt4U/discussion
R=adg, rsc, r, n13m3y3r
CC=golang-dev, minux.ma
https://golang.org/cl/6501094
Go 1.0 behavior was to create an UnmarshalFieldError when a json value name matched an unexported field name. This error will no longer be created and the field will be skipped instead.
Fixes#4660.
R=adg, rsc, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7139049
All packages place testdata in a specific directory with the name
"testdata". The mime and strconv packages have been updated to use
the same convention.
mime: Move "mime/test.types" to "mime/testdata/test.types". Update test
code accordingly.
strconv: Move "strconv/testfp.txt" to "strconv/testdata/testfp.txt".
Update test code accordingly.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7098072
This fixes the incorrect unix timestamp of the standard time and adds
an example for (Time) Format to clarify how timezones work in format strings.
Fixes#4364.
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng, kevlar, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7069046
Offsets for return values from seek were miscalculated
and a translation from 32-bit code for error handling
was incorrect.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7181045
Previously, Go TLS servers always took the client's preferences into
account when selecting a ciphersuite. This change adds the option of
using the server's preferences, which can be expressed by setting
tls.Config.CipherSuites.
This mirrors Apache's SSLHonorCipherOrder directive.
R=golang-dev, nightlyone, bradfitz, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7163043
Currently it's summed to mark phase.
The change makes it easier to diagnose long stop-the-world phases.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, dave
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7182043
so that the user don't need to decipher something like this:
template: main:1: expected %!s(parse.itemType=14) in end; got "|"
now they get this:
template: main:1: unexpected "|" in end
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7128054
I messed this up from the beginning. The receiver isn't a pointer so
setting Err is useless. In order to maintain the API, just remove the
superfluous code.
Fixes#4657.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7161043
Fortunately we have never seen the panic on sockaddrToTCP
in the past year.
««« original CL description
net: panic if sockaddrToTCP returns nil incorrectly
Part of diagnosing the selfConnect bug
TBR=dsymonds
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5687057
»»»
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7137063
If the scanned block has no typeinfo the garbage collector will attempt
to get the actual type of the block.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7093045
On Plan 9, only the parent of a given process can enter its wait
queue. When a Go program tries to fork-exec a child process
and subsequently waits for it to finish, the goroutines doing
these two tasks do not necessarily tie themselves to the same
(or any single) OS thread. In the case that the fork and the wait
system calls happen on different OS threads (say, due to a
goroutine being rescheduled somewhere along the way), the
wait() will either return an error or end up waiting for a
completely different child than was intended.
This change forces the fork and wait syscalls to happen in the
same goroutine and ties that goroutine to its OS thread until
the child exits. The PID of the child is recorded upon fork and
exit, and de-queued once the child's wait message has been read.
The Wait API, then, is translated into a synthetic implementation
that simply waits for the requested PID to show up in the queue
and then reads the associated stats.
R=rsc, rminnich, npe, mirtchovski, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6545051
Decode as much as possible of a Huffman symbol in a single table
lookup (much like the zlib implementation), filling more bits
(conservatively, so we don't consume past the end of the stream)
when the code prefix indicates more bits are needed. This
results in about a 50% performance gain in speed benchmarks.
The following set is benchcmp done on a retina MacBook Pro:
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsSpeed1e4 28.41 42.79 1.51x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsSpeed1e5 30.18 47.62 1.58x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsSpeed1e6 30.81 48.14 1.56x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsDefault1e4 30.28 44.61 1.47x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsDefault1e5 32.18 51.94 1.61x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsDefault1e6 35.57 53.28 1.50x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsCompress1e4 30.39 44.83 1.48x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsCompress1e5 33.05 51.64 1.56x
BenchmarkDecodeDigitsCompress1e6 35.69 53.04 1.49x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainSpeed1e4 25.90 43.04 1.66x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainSpeed1e5 29.97 48.19 1.61x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainSpeed1e6 31.36 49.43 1.58x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainDefault1e4 28.79 45.02 1.56x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainDefault1e5 37.12 55.65 1.50x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainDefault1e6 39.28 58.16 1.48x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainCompress1e4 28.64 44.90 1.57x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainCompress1e5 37.40 55.98 1.50x
BenchmarkDecodeTwainCompress1e6 39.35 58.06 1.48x
R=rsc, dave, minux.ma, bradfitz, nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6872063
Calling it will show memory allocation statistics for that
single benchmark (if -test.benchmem is not provided)
R=golang-dev, rsc, kevlar, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7027046
I think that the parser is complete enough to take that warning out.
It passes the test suite.
There may be incompatible API changes, but being in the exp directory
is warning enough for that.
R=nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7131050
We need to wait for the handler to actually finish running,
not almost be done running.
This was always a bug, but now that handler output is buffered
it shows up easily on GOMAXPROCS >1 systems.
R=golang-dev, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7109043
- always set the Pkg field in QualifiedIdents
- call Context.Ident for all identifiers in the AST that denote
a types.Object (bug fix)
- added test that Context.Ident is called for all such identifiers
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7101054
Completely removed *ast.Objects from being exposed by the
types API. *ast.Objects are still required internally for
resolution, but now the door is open for an internal-only
rewrite of identifier resolution entirely at type-check
time. Once that is done, ASTs can be type-checked whether
they have been created via the go/parser or otherwise,
and type-checking does not require *ast.Object or scope
invariants to be maintained externally.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7096048
Also undo revision a5b96b602690 used to workaround the bug.
Fixes#4643.
R=rsc, golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, lucio.dere, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7090043
The existing type checker was relying on augmenting ast.Object
fields (empty interfaces) for its purposes. While this worked
for some time now, it has become increasingly brittle. Also,
the need for package information for Fields and Methods would
have required a new field in each ast.Object. Rather than making
them bigger and the code even more subtle, in this CL we are moving
away from ast.Objects.
The types packge now defines its own objects for different
language entities (Const, Var, TypeName, Func), and they
implement the types.Object interface. Imported packages
create a Package object which holds the exported entities
in a types.Scope of types.Objects.
For type-checking, the current package is still using ast.Objects
to make this transition manageable. In a next step, the type-
checker will also use types.Objects instead, which opens the door
door to resolving ASTs entirely by the type checker. As a result,
the AST and type checker become less entangled, and ASTs can be
manipulated "by hand" or programmatically w/o having to worry
about scope and object invariants that are very hard to maintain.
(As a consequence, a future parser can do less work, and a
future AST will not need to define objects and scopes anymore.
Also, object resolution which is now split across the parser,
the ast, (ast.NewPackage), and even the type checker (for composite
literal keys) can be done in a single place which will be simpler
and more efficient.)
Change details:
- Check now takes a []*ast.File instead of a map[string]*ast.File.
It's easier to handle (I deleted code at all use sites) and does
not suffer from undefined order (which is a pain for testing).
- ast.Object.Data is now a *types.Package rather then an *ast.Scope
if the object is a package (obj.Kind == ast.Pkg). Eventually this
will go away altogether.
- Instead of an ast.Importer, Check now uses a types.Importer
(which returns a *types.Package).
- types.NamedType has two object fields (Obj Object and obj *ast.Object);
eventually there will be only Obj. The *ast.Object is needed during
this transition since a NamedType may refer to either an imported
(using types.Object) or locally defined (using *ast.Object) type.
- ast.NewPackage is not used anymore - there's a local copy for
package-level resolution of imports.
- struct fields now take the package origin into account.
- The GcImporter is now returning a *types.Package. It cannot be
used with ast.NewPackage anymore. If that functionality is still
used, a copy of the old GcImporter should be made locally (note
that GcImporter was part of exp/types and it's API was not frozen).
- dot-imports are not handled for the time being (this will come back).
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7058060
This introduces a buffer between writing from a handler and
writing chunks. Further, it delays writing the header until
the first full chunk is ready. In the case where the first
full chunk is also the final chunk (for small responses), that
means we can also compute a Content-Length, which is a nice
side effect for certain benchmarks.
Fixes#2357
R=golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, rsc, adg, balasanjay
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6964043
The old code made it impossible to implement a reverse proxy
with anything less than 4k write granularity to the backends.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7060059
ratio isn't 1x1.
Fixes#4259.
The test data was generated by
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x2 video-005.gray.pgm > video-005.gray.q50.2x2.jpeg
cjpeg -quality 50 -sample 2x2 -progressive video-005.gray.pgm > video-005.gray.q50.2x2.progressive.jpeg
similarly to video-005.gray.q50.* from
http://code.google.com/p/go/source/detail?r=51f26e36ba98
the key difference being the "-sample 2x2".
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7069045
bytes.Equal is simpler to read and should also be faster because
of short-circuiting and assembly implementations.
Change generated automatically using:
gofmt -r 'bytes.Compare(a, b) == 0 -> bytes.Equal(a, b)'
gofmt -r 'bytes.Compare(a, b) != 0 -> !bytes.Equal(a, b)'
R=golang-dev, dave, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7038051
Closures are incredibly expensive on linux/arm due to
repetitive flush of instruction cache.
go test -short on ODROID-X:
Before:
ok exp/gotype 17.091s
ok go/types 2.225s
After:
ok exp/gotype 7.193s
ok go/types 1.143s
R=dave, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/7062045
The Plan 9 symbol table format defines big-endian symbol values
for portability, but we want to be able to generate an ELF object file
and let the host linker link it, as part of the solution to issue 4069.
The symbol table itself, since it is loaded into memory at run time,
must be filled in by the final host linker, using relocation directives
to set the symbol values. On a little-endian machine, the linker will
only fill in little-endian values during relocation, so we are forced
to use little-endian symbol values.
To preserve most of the original portability of the symbol table
format, we make the table itself say whether it uses big- or
little-endian values. If the table begins with the magic sequence
fe ff ff ff 00 00
then the actual table begins after those six bytes and contains
little-endian symbol values. Otherwise, the table is in the original
format and contains big-endian symbol values. The magic sequence
looks like an "end of table" entry (the fifth byte is zero), so legacy
readers will see a little-endian table as an empty table.
All the gc architectures are little-endian today, so the practical
effect of this CL is to make all the generated tables little-endian,
but if a big-endian system comes along, ld will not generate
the magic sequence, and the various readers will fall back to the
original big-endian interpretation.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7066043
RFC5424 specifies a version number (currently 1) after the facility and
severity in a syslog message (e.g. <7>1 TIMESTAMP ...). This causes
rsyslog to fail to parse syslog message because the rest of the message
is not fully compliant with RFC5424.
For the widest compatibility, drop the version (messages are in the
RFC3164 BSD syslog format (e.g. <7>TIMESTAMP ...). Have tested this with
syslog-ng, rsyslog and syslogd.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7036050
TimeoutHandler was changed from "ns int64" to "dt time.Duration" on
Nov 30, 2011, but the godoc still refers to "ns".
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7031050
* Extended deadline to 30 seconds
* Added logging of the duration of each package import
* Fail the test immediately if directories cannot be read
R=gri, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7030055
It already did so for its sibling, *strings.Reader, as well as *bytes.Buffer.
R=edsrzf, dave, adg, kevlar, remyoudompheng, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7031045