The old heap maps used a multilevel table, but that
was overkill: there are only 1M entries on a 32-bit
machine and we can arrange to use a dense address
range on a 64-bit machine.
The heap map is in bss. The assumption is that if
we don't touch the pages they won't be mapped in.
Also moved some duplicated memory allocation
code out of the OS-specific files.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4118042
Also, if the header is bad, exit with a non-zero status.
Other calls to Brdline in the tree, by category:
Reading symbol name from object file:
./cmd/5l/obj.c:486: name = Brdline(f, '\0');
./cmd/6l/obj.c:535: name = Brdline(f, '\0');
./cmd/8l/obj.c:564: name = Brdline(f, '\0');
./libmach/sym.c:292: cp = Brdline(bp, '\0');
Reading archive header line (fixed, short):
./cmd/gc/lex.c:287: if((a = Brdline(b, '\n')) == nil)
./cmd/gc/lex.c:303: if((p = Brdline(b, '\n')) == nil)
Reading object file header line (fixed, short):
./cmd/ld/lib.c:421: line = Brdline(f, '\n');
Reading undefined symbol list (unused code):
./cmd/ld/lib.c:773: while((l = Brdline(b, '\n')) != nil){
Implementing Brdstr:
./libbio/brdstr.c:36: p = Brdline(bp, delim);
The symbol names ones will cause a problem loudly if they
fail: they'll error out with symbol name too long. This means
that you can't define an enormous struct without giving the
type a name and then stick it in an interface, because the
type's symbol name will be too long for the object file.
Since this will be a loud failure instead of a silent one,
I'm willing to wait until it comes up in practice.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1982041
but with less precision than hardware counterparts.
fixed a number of tests to output BUG when they failed.
changed the runner to distinghuish between output
and output containing ^BUG
R=rsc
CC=dho, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1778041
* correct symbol table size
* do not reorder functions in output
* traceback
* signal handling
* use same code for go + defer
* handle leaf functions in symbol table
R=kaib, dpx
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/884041
* example-based syntax errors (go.errors)
* enable bison's more specific errors
and translate grammar token names into
tokens like ++
* test cases
R=ken2, r, ken3
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/194085
too hard to make it the same everywhere.
still checking for non-zero exit status though.
disable core files while running tests
R=r
http://go/go-review/1026037
tests are processed, and thus the run.out output. The default
LANG on Fedora 10, en_US.utf8, causes the tests to be sorted
differently--e.g., arrayindex1.go and arrayindex.go are sorted
in the opposite order.
R=r, rsc
http://go/go-review/1018022
special all-nacl.bash and test/run-nacl that
run just the tests known to work under nacl.
the rest requires closures.
fix another bug or two in syscall.
R=r
DELTA=420 (410 added, 8 deleted, 2 changed)
OCL=34882
CL=34907
4 known bugs; 0 unexpected bugs
which should be less scary to people
unfamiliar with the tests.
R=r
DELTA=44 (29 added, 12 deleted, 3 changed)
OCL=32460
CL=32464
fix bug in run that was missing output.
make run warn about tests in bugs/ that succeed with no output
(should be moved to fixedbugs/).
R=r
DELTA=21 (18 added, 0 deleted, 3 changed)
OCL=19381
CL=19381
- do not print tracebacks if $GOTRACEBACK=0
- set GOTRACEBACK=0 during tests
- filter out pc numbers in errors
R=r
DELTA=70 (22 added, 30 deleted, 18 changed)
OCL=15618
CL=15642
permits testing that the compiler emits error messages for
specific lines that match egrep regexps. The desired error
messages are expressed using comments of the form
// ERROR "regexp"
R=r
DELTA=90 (73 added, 8 deleted, 9 changed)
OCL=15513
CL=15566
clean up the golden file a bit to have less meaningless content and be more robust to spurious diffs.
now there is output only for tests that produce output or failure.
R=gri
OCL=14005
CL=14005