Not for Go 1.2. Still needs a flag.
Linux at least (and likely other OSes) don't like you doing
a few hundred readdirs at once and spawing as many threads.
R=golang-dev, adg, jeremyjackins
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/30620043
Command set:
- what: an extremely fast query that parses a single
file and returns the AST stack, package name and the
set of query modes that apply to the current selection.
Intended for GUI tools that need to grey out UI elements.
- definition: shows the definition of an identifier.
- pointsto: the PTA features of 'describe' have been split
out into their own command.
- describe: with PTA stripped out, the cost is now bounded by
type checking.
Performance:
- The importer.Config.TypeCheckFuncBodies predicate supports
setting the 'IgnoreFuncBodies' typechecker flag on a
per-package basis. This means we can load dependencies from
source more quickly if we only need exported types.
(We avoid gcimport data because it may be absent or stale.)
This also means we can run type-based queries on packages
that aren't part of the pointer analysis scope. (Yay.)
- Modes that require only type analysis of the query package
run a "what" query first, and restrict their analysis scope
to just that package and its dependencies (sans func
bodies), making them much faster.
- We call newOracle not oracle.New in Query, so that the
'needs' bitset isn't ignored (oops!). This makes the
non-PTA queries faster.
Also:
- removed vestigial timers junk.
- pos.go: existing position utilties split out into own file.
Added parsePosFlag utility.
- numerous cosmetic tweaks.
+ very basic tests.
To do in follow-ups:
- sophisticated editor integration of "what".
- better tests.
- refactoring of control flow as described in comment.
- changes to "implements", "describe" commands.
- update design doc + user manual.
R=crawshaw, dominik.honnef
CC=golang-dev, gri
https://golang.org/cl/40630043
Using a type containing a sync type directly
in a function call (whether as a receiver,
a param, or a return value) is an easy way
to accidentally copy a lock or other sync primitive.
Check for it.
The test as implemented does not provide 100%
coverage; see the discussion near the bottom of
testdata/copylock.go for shortcomings.
Fixesgolang/go#6729.
R=adg, r, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/23420043
Split the profile parsing code out of cmd/cover into
a reusable package, to support third-party coverage
tools.
R=golang-dev, r, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/36050045
Add explicit options to Corpus to control search indexing of documentation, Go source code, and full-text.
R=bradfitz, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/24190043
- fixed a couple of TODOs
- various cleanups along the way
- adjusted clients
Once submitted, clients of go/types that don't explicitly
specify Config.Import will need to add the extra import:
import _ "code.google.com/p/go.tools/go/gcimporter"
to install the default (gc) importer in go/types.
R=adonovan, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/26390043
Performance increase is much smaller than expected;
need to investigate. Possibly, repeatedly (for each
line) accessing file sets from multiple goroutines
(in the scanner) is a bottle neck; or perhaps i/o.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/23090043
The symbolic names such as NOSPLIT for annotations on the TEXT
directive appeared after vet started checking .s files. This CL tweaks
the regular expression to allow CAPITALS and the symbols | and +
as well as digits in that field, and interprets NOSPLIT as equivalent
to 7 in that field. All magic.
Fixesgolang/go#6695
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/18700044
This CL makes gotype usable again. Removed -r
(recursive) mode; use go/build to determine
the correct set of Go files when processing
a directory. The -v (verbose) mode now prints
some basic stats (duration, number of files,
lines, and lines/s).
Thoroughly restructured the code.
Applying gotype -v -a . to the go/types directory:
128.94141ms (40 files, 12008 lines, 93127 lines/s)
On a 2.8 GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon, 800 MHz DDR2 FB-DIMM,
with go/types built with the (interal) debug flag set to
false. There's still quite a bit of room for performance
improvement in all parts of the code since no tuning has
been done.
R=golang-dev, adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/19930043
This allows us to run/analyze multiple tests.
Also it causes the production code packages to be properly initialized.
Also:
- cmd/ssadump: improved usage message (add example;
incorporate LoadInitialPackages usage; explain how -run
finds main).
- pointer, oracle, ssa/interp: use CreateTestMainPackage.
- ssa/builder.go: remove 'rundefers' instruction from package init,
which no longer uses 'defer'.
R=gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/15920047
A function such as this:
func one() (x int) {
defer func() { recover() }()
x = 1
panic("return")
}
that combines named return parameters (NRPs) with deferred calls
that call recover, may return non-zero values despite the
fact it doesn't even contain a return statement. (!)
This requires a change to the SSA API: all functions'
control-flow graphs now have a second entry point, called
Recover, which is the block at which control flow resumes
after a recovered panic. The Recover block simply loads the
NRPs and returns them.
As an optimization, most functions don't need a Recover block,
so it is omitted. In fact it is only needed for functions that
have NRPs and defer a call to another function that _may_ call
recover.
Dataflow analysis of SSA now requires extra work, since every
may-panic instruction has an implicit control-flow edge to
the Recover block. The only dataflow analysis so far implemented
is SSA renaming, for which we make the following simplifying
assumption: the Recover block only loads the NRPs and returns.
This means we don't really need to analyze it, we can just
skip the "lifting" of such NRPs. We also special-case the Recover
block in the dominance computation.
Rejected alternative approaches:
- Specifying a Recover block for every defer instruction (like a
traditional exception handler).
This seemed like excessive generality, since Go programs
only need the same degenerate form of Recover block.
- Adding an instruction to set the Recover block immediately
after the named return values are set up, so that dominance
can be computed without special-casing.
This didn't seem worth the effort.
Interpreter:
- This CL completely reimplements the panic/recover/
defer logic in the interpreter. It's clearer and simpler
and closer to the model in the spec.
- Some runtime panic messages have been changed to be closer
to gc's, since tests depend on it.
- The interpreter now requires that the runtime.runtimeError
type be part of the SSA program. This requires that clients
import this package prior to invoking the interpreter.
This in turn requires (Importer).ImportPackage(path string),
which this CL adds.
- All $GOROOT/test/recover{,1,2,3}.go tests are now passing.
NB, the bug described in coverage.go (defer/recover in a concatenated
init function) remains. Will be fixed in a follow-up.
Fixesgolang/go#6381
R=gri
CC=crawshaw, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13844043
Break the basic block at the function literal. The code to do this analysis
was already there; this CL just factors it out more nicely and uses it in
one new place. Also adds a test.
Fixesgolang/go#6555.
R=golang-dev, adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14601043
- removed support for nil constants from go/exact
- instead define a singleton Nil Object (the nil _value_)
- in assignments, follow more closely spec wording
(pending spec CL 14415043)
- removed use of goto in checker.unary
- cleanup around handling of isRepresentable for
constants, with better error messages
- fix missing checks in checker.convertUntyped
- added isTyped (== !isUntyped) and isInterface predicates
- fixed hasNil predicate: unsafe.Pointer also has nil
- adjusted ssa per adonovan
- implememted types.Implements (wrapper arounfd types.MissingMethod)
- use types.Implements in vet (and fix a bug)
R=adonovan, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14438052
Present the files in lexical order so the output is reproducible
and easier to navigate. Do a little type rearrangement to simplify
things while we're there.
R=adg
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14357043
The redirect.PrefixHandler redirects "/foo/" to "/foo", which is what
we want in most cases ("/cl/", "/change/", etc) but not here.
So wrap it with a handler that handles "/blog/" explictly.
R=dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14326043
e.g. "oracle callgraph <package>"
Also: simplified error handling.
Eliminated oracle.errorf because it prepends "file:line:col: "
to the error message so the main function can't safely prepend "Error: ".
The position wasn't interesting though: it was just -pos, more or less.
R=crawshaw, dominik.honnef, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13864044
This CL is mostly a renaming s/json/serial/, abstracting the
oracle package away from any particular data syntax. (The
encoding/* machinery is very clean; clearly I should have
structured it this way from the outset.)
Supporting XML then becomes a one-liner in cmd/oracle/main.go.
Also: call MarshalIndent(), not Marshall() then Indent().
R=crawshaw
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13858046
(reflect.Value).Send
(reflect.Value).TrySend
(reflect.Value).Recv
(reflect.Value).TryRecv
(reflect.Type).ChanOf
(reflect.Type).In
(reflect.Type).Out
reflect.Indirect
reflect.MakeChan
Also:
- specialize genInvoke when the receiver is a reflect.Type under the
assumption that there's only one possible concrete type. This
makes all reflect.Type operations context-sensitive since the calls
are no longer dynamic.
- Rename all variables to match the actual parameter names used in
the reflect API.
- Add pointer.Config.Reflection flag
(exposed in oracle as --reflect, default false) to enable reflection.
It currently adds about 20% running time. I'll make it true after
the presolver is implemented.
- Simplified worklist datatype and solver main loop slightly
(~10% speed improvement).
- Use addLabel() utility to add a label to a PTS.
(Working on my 3 yr old 2x2GHz+4GB Mac vs 8x4GHz+24GB workstation,
one really notices the cost of pointer analysis.
Note to self: time to implement presolver.)
R=crawshaw
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13242062
Full help is only displayed when -help is requested;
CLI usage errors just remind the the user of this flag.
R=r, crawshaw
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13523048
line2byte doesn't handle non utf-8 fileencoding. So added s:getpos().
And also, changing errorformat is not right way on go filetype.
Added range operations.
R=golang-dev, kamil.kisiel, dsymonds, dominik.honnef
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13656045
Defer parsing of blog content until accessed for faster startup.
Fall back on redirect if blog content unavailable locally.
R=golang-dev, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13335052
Remove References section heading.
Add redirects from old paths to new content.
Add a link to the SubRepositories wiki page from package list.
Add styles for "pop-out" link.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13356047
Previously these helpers were added by a private deployment script.
There's no reason why they shouldn't be part of godoc proper now
that it's in the go.tools repository.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/13722043