Such variables would be put at 0(SP), leading to serious
corruptions at zero initialization.
Fixes#3084.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/5683052
Because bug040.go was ignoring all error messages, the fact
that it got an error about fuction main was being ignored.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5675085
The set of errors forwarded by the os package varied with system and
was therefore non-portable.
Three helpers added for portable error checking: IsExist, IsNotExist, and IsPermission.
One or two more may need to come, but let's keep the set very small to discourage
thinking about errors that way.
R=mikioh.mikioh, gustavo, r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5672047
This CL makes it possible to run make.bash with
GOOS and GOARCH set to something other than
the native host GOOS and GOARCH.
As part of the CL, the tool directory moves from bin/tool/
to pkg/tool/goos_goarch where goos and goarch are
the values for the host system (running the build), not
the target. pkg/ is not technically appropriate, but C objects
are there now tool (pkg/obj/) so this puts all the generated
binaries in one place (rm -rf $GOROOT/pkg cleans everything).
Including goos_goarch in the name allows different systems
to share a single $GOROOT on a shared file system.
Fixes#2920.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5645093
Fix it twice: reuse registers more aggressively in cgen abop,
and also release R14 and R15, which are no longer m and g.
Fixes#2669.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5655056
This changes makes constant propagation compare 'from' values using node
pointers rather than symbol names when checking to see whether a set
operation is redundant. When a function is inlined multiple times in a
calling function its arguments will share symbol names even though the values
are different. Prior to this fix the bug409 test would hit a case with 6g
where an LEAQ instruction was incorrectly eliminated from the second inlined
function call. 8g appears to have had the same bug, but the test did not fail
there.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5646044
The go- is redundant now that the directory is required
to be inside $GOROOT. Rob LGTMed the idea.
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5618044
gccgo currently fails this test:
fixedbugs/bug402.go:12:9: error: floating point constant truncated to integer
fixedbugs/bug402.go:13:8: error: floating point constant truncated to integer
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5600050
complit1.go:37:34: error: may only omit types within composite literals of slice, array, or map type
complit1.go:38:19: error: may only omit types within composite literals of slice, array, or map type
complit1.go:18:21: error: slice of unaddressable value
complit1.go:19:10: error: slice of unaddressable value
complit1.go:20:9: error: slice of unaddressable value
convert1.go:28:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:32:12: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type string as type Tint64)
convert1.go:36:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:37:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:40:11: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:41:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:44:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:46:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:48:11: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:50:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:52:6: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:53:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:54:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:56:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:57:11: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:58:11: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:64:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:68:12: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tstring as type Tint64)
convert1.go:72:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:73:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:76:11: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tbyte as type Trune)
convert1.go:77:12: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tbyte as type Tint64)
convert1.go:80:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:82:13: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:84:11: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Trune as type Tbyte)
convert1.go:86:12: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Trune as type Tint64)
convert1.go:88:6: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tint64 as type string)
convert1.go:89:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:90:12: error: invalid type conversion
convert1.go:92:13: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tint64 as type Tstring)
convert1.go:93:11: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tint64 as type Tbyte)
convert1.go:94:11: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Tint64 as type Trune)
fixedbugs/bug195.go:9:21: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
fixedbugs/bug195.go:12:21: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
fixedbugs/bug195.go:15:15: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
fixedbugs/bug195.go:18:2: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/bug195.go:26:2: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/bug195.go:22:2: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/bug251.go:15:2: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/bug251.go:11:2: error: invalid recursive interface
fixedbugs/bug374.go:18:34: error: use of undefined type ‘xxxx’
fixedbugs/bug374.go:16:5: error: incompatible type in initialization (incompatible type for method ‘m’ (different number of parameters))
fixedbugs/bug383.go:11:2: error: expected boolean expression
fixedbugs/bug383.go:12:2: error: expected boolean expression
fixedbugs/bug386.go:10:25: error: incompatible type for return value 1 (type has no methods)
fixedbugs/bug386.go:12:25: error: incompatible type for return value 1 (type has no methods)
fixedbugs/bug388.go:12:10: error: invalid named/anonymous mix
fixedbugs/bug388.go:17:19: error: non-name on left side of ‘:=’
fixedbugs/bug388.go:22:9: error: non-name on left side of ‘:=’
fixedbugs/bug388.go:27:10: error: expected type
fixedbugs/bug388.go:32:9: error: expected type
fixedbugs/bug388.go:23:14: error: reference to field ‘i’ in object which has no fields or methods
fixedbugs/bug388.go:18:18: error: invalid use of type
fixedbugs/bug389.go:12:5: error: incompatible type in initialization (different parameter types)
fixedbugs/bug390.go:15:24: error: expected integer, floating, or complex type
fixedbugs/bug394.go:10:1: error: expected declaration
fixedbugs/bug397.go:12:2: error: incompatible type for element 2 key in map construction
switch3.go:18:2: error: incompatible types in binary expression
switch3.go:22:2: error: incompatible types in binary expression
switch3.go:28:2: error: map can only be compared to nil
switch3.go:35:2: error: slice can only be compared to nil
switch3.go:42:2: error: func can only be compared to nil
syntax/else.go:11:9: error: expected ‘if’ or ‘{’
typeswitch2.go:15:2: error: duplicate type in switch
typeswitch2.go:19:2: error: duplicate type in switch
typeswitch2.go:26:2: error: duplicate type in switch
typeswitch2.go:40:9: error: ‘t’ declared and not used
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5573073
Pulling function calls out to happen before the
expression being evaluated was causing illegal
reorderings even without inlining; with inlining
it got worse. This CL adds a separate ordering pass
to move things with a fixed order out of expressions
and into the statement sequence, where they will
not be reordered by walk.
Replaces lvd's CL 5534079.
Fixes#2740.
R=lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5569062
I haven't looked at the source, but the gc compiler appears to
omit "not used" errors when there is an error in the
initializer. This is harder to do in gccgo, and frankly I
think the "not used" error is still useful even if the
initializer has a problem. This CL tweaks some tests to avoid
the error, which is not the point of these tests in any case.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5561059
Preserve test.
changeset: 11593:f1deaf35e1d1
user: Luuk van Dijk <lvd@golang.org>
date: Tue Jan 17 10:00:57 2012 +0100
summary: gc: fix infinite recursion for embedded interfaces
This is causing 'interface type loop' errors during compilation
of a complex program. I don't understand what's happening
well enough to boil it down to a simple test case, but undoing
this change fixes the problem.
The change being undone is fixing a corner case (uses of
pointer to interface in an interface definition) that basically
only comes up in erroneous Go programs. Let's not try to
fix this again until after Go 1.
Unfixes issue 1909.
TBR=lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5555063