An experiment: allow structs to be copied even if they
contain unexported fields. This gives packages the
ability to return opaque values in their APIs, like reflect
does for reflect.Value but without the kludgy hacks reflect
resorts to.
In general, we trust programmers not to do silly things
like *x = *y on a package's struct pointers, just as we trust
programmers not to do unicode.Letter = unicode.Digit,
but packages that want a harder guarantee can introduce
an extra level of indirection, like in the changes to os.File
in this CL or by using an interface type.
All in one CL so that it can be rolled back more easily if
we decide this is a bad idea.
Originally discussed in March 2011.
https://groups.google.com/group/golang-dev/t/3f5d30938c7c45ef
R=golang-dev, adg, dvyukov, r, bradfitz, jan.mercl, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5372095
Allow any type in switch on interface value.
Statically check typeswitch early.
Fixes#2423.
Fixes#2424.
R=rsc, dsymonds
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5339045
This contains the files that required handiwork, mostly
Makefiles with updated TARGs, plus the two packages
with modified package names.
html/template/doc.go needs a separate edit pass.
test/fixedbugs/bug358.go is not legal go so gofix fails on it.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5340050
Fixes#2355.
I have a test, but not sure if it's worth adding. Instead i've made
the patching-over in reflect.c methods more fatal and more descriptive.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5302082
Got rid of all the magic mystery globals. Now
for %N, %T, and %S, the flags +,- and # set a sticky
debug, sym and export mode, only visible in the new fmt.c.
Default is error mode. Handle h and l flags consistently with
the least side effects, so we can now change
things without worrying about unrelated things
breaking.
fixes#2361
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5316043
Fixes#2337.
Unfortunate sequence of events is:
1. maxcpu=2, mcpu=1, grunning=1
2. starttheworld creates an extra M:
maxcpu=2, mcpu=2, grunning=1
4. the goroutine calls runtime.GOMAXPROCS(1)
maxcpu=1, mcpu=2, grunning=1
5. since it sees mcpu>maxcpu, it calls gosched()
6. schedule() deschedules the goroutine:
maxcpu=1, mcpu=1, grunning=0
7. schedule() call getnextandunlock() which
fails to pick up the goroutine again,
because canaddcpu() fails, because mcpu==maxcpu
8. then it sees that grunning==0,
reports deadlock and terminates
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5191044
My previous CL:
changeset: 9645:ce2e5f44b310
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Tue Sep 06 10:24:21 2011 -0400
summary: gc: unify stack frame layout
introduced a bug wherein no variables were
being registerized, making Go programs 2-3x
slower than they had been before.
This CL fixes that bug (along with some others
it was hiding) and adds a test that optimization
makes at least one test case faster.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5174045
bug340.go:14:7: error: expected type
bug340.go:15:4: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘x’
bug350.go:12:1: error: redefinition of ‘m’
bug350.go:11:1: note: previous definition of ‘m’ was here
bug350.go:15:1: error: redefinition of ‘p’
bug350.go:14:1: note: previous definition of ‘p’ was here
bug351.go:12:6: error: non-name on left side of ‘:=’
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5127041
bug363.go:13:12: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for shift operand
bug363.go:16:12: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for shift operand
pointer.go:34:6: error: incompatible type in initialization (pointer to interface type has no methods)
pointer.go:36:6: error: incompatible type in initialization
method2.go:15:1: error: invalid pointer or interface receiver type
method2.go:16:1: error: invalid pointer or interface receiver type
method2.go:21:1: error: invalid pointer or interface receiver type
method2.go:22:1: error: invalid pointer or interface receiver type
method2.go:28:15: error: type ‘*Val’ has no method ‘val’
method2.go:33:11: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘val’
shift1.go:19:16: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for shift operand
shift1.go:24:19: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for shift operand
shift1.go:25:17: error: invalid context-determined non-integer type for shift operand
shift1.go:18:18: error: shift of non-integer operand
shift1.go:26:13: error: floating point constant truncated to integer
shift1.go:33:15: error: integer constant overflow
shift1.go:34:15: error: integer constant overflow
shift1.go:35:17: error: integer constant overflow
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5081051
Added a return to bug357.go to avoid an error which gccgo
reports but 6g does not.
bug353.go:16:14: error: reference to undefined identifer ‘io.ReadWriterCloser’
bug357.go:18:2: error: value computed is not used
bug358.go:14:11: error: imported and not used: ioutil
bug358.go:19:9: error: invalid use of type
bug359.go:25:14: error: redefinition of ‘a’
bug359.go:25:6: note: previous definition of ‘a’ was here
bug359.go:19:6: error: incompatible type in initialization (implicit assignment of ‘list.List’ hidden field ‘front’)
bug362.go:13:6: error: iota is only defined in const declarations
bug362.go:14:6: error: iota is only defined in const declarations
bug362.go:15:6: error: iota is only defined in const declarations
bug363.go:13:12: error: shift of non-integer operand
bug363.go:16:12: error: shift of non-integer operand
bug365.go:15:8: error: expected package
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5078046
bug349.go:12:14: error: expected ‘;’ or ‘}’ or newline
bug349.go:12:2: error: not enough arguments to return
R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5081047
// ERROR "pattern1" "pattern2"
means that there has to be one or more
lines matching pattern1 and then excluding
those, there have to be one or more lines
matching pattern2. So if you expect two
different error messages from a particular
line, writing two separate patterns checks
that both errors are produced.
Also, errchk now flags lines that produce
more errors than expected. Before, as long as
at least one error matched the pattern, all the
others were ignored.
Revise tests to expect or silence these
additional errors.
R=lvd, r, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4869044
This is a core API change.
1) gofix misc src
2) Manual adjustments to the following files under src/pkg:
gob/decode.go
rpc/client.go
os/error.go
io/io.go
bufio/bufio.go
http/request.go
websocket/client.go
as well as:
src/cmd/gofix/testdata/*.go.in (reverted)
test/fixedbugs/bug243.go
3) Implemented gofix patch (oserrorstring.go) and test case (oserrorstring_test.go)
Compiles and runs all tests.
R=r, rsc, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4607052
The spec was adjusted in commit df410d6a4842 to allow the
implicit assignment of strutures with unexported fields in
method receivers. This change updates the compiler.
Also moved bug322 into fixedbugs and updated golden.out
to reflect the removal of the last known bug.
Fixes#1402.
R=golang-dev, gri, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4526069
The code for converting negative floats was
incorrectly loading an FP control word from
the stack without ever having stored it there.
Thanks to Lars Pensjö for reporting this bug.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4515091
Previously, whether declaring a type which copied the structure of a type it was referenced in via a pointer field would work depended on whether you declared it before or after the type it copied, e.g. type T2 T1; type T1 struct { F *T2 } would work, however type T1 struct { F *T2 }; type T2 T1 wouldn't.
Fixes#667.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4313064
go/types: update for export data format change
reflect: require package qualifiers to match during interface check
runtime: require package qualifiers to match during interface check
test: fixed bug324, adapt to be silent
Fixes#1550.
Issue 1536 remains open.
R=gri, ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4442071
bug323.go:18:3: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘Meth’
bug323.go:19:3: error: reference to undefined field or method ‘Meth2’
R=golang-dev, rsc1
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4280072
bug325.go:13:10: error: invalid indirect of ‘unsafe.Pointer’
bug325.go:14:31: error: reference to field ‘foo’ in object which has no fields or methods
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4313050
bug274.go:23:3: error: missing statement after label
bug274.go:25:3: error: missing statement after label
bug274.go:28:3: error: label ‘L2’ defined and not used
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4273114
Change unsafe.Pointer to be its own kind of
type, instead of making it equivalent to *any.
The change complicates import and export
but avoids the need to find all the places that
operate on pointers but should not operate on
unsafe.Pointer.
Fixes#1566. (a different way)
Fixes#1582.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4264050
Also: renamed fixedbugs/bug322.go to fixedbugs/bug323.go
because we already have a bugs/bug322.go and bug322.dir.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4219044
The recent linker changes broke NaCl support
a month ago, and there are no known users of it.
The NaCl code can always be recovered from the
repository history.
R=adg, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3671042
cc: same
runtime: test cc alignment (required moving #define of offsetof to runtime.h)
fix bug260
Fixes#482.
Fixes#609.
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3563042
Specifically:
* lib/godoc:
- provide file set (FSet) argument to formatters where needed
* src/cmd:
- cgo, ebnflint, godoc, gofmt, goinstall: provide file set (fset) where needed
- godoc: remove local binary search with sort.Search (change by rsc),
extract file set for formatters
* src/pkg:
- exp/eval: remove embedded token.Position fields from nodes and replace
with named token.Pos fields; add corresponding Pos() accessor methods
- go/token: added file.Line(), changed signature of File.Position()
* test/fixedbugs/:
- bug206.go: change test to not rely on token.Pos details
* added various extra comments
* Runs all.bash
* gofmt formats all of src, misc w/o changes
* godoc runs
* performance:
- The new version of godoc consumes about the same space after indexing
has completed, but indexing is half the speed. Significant space savings
are expected from smaller ASTs, but since they are thrown away after a
file has been indexed, this is not visible anymore. The slower indexing
time is due to the much more expensive computation of line information.
However, with the new compressed position information, indexing can be
rewritten and simplified. Furthermore, computing the line info can be
done more efficiently.
New godoc, immediately after indexing completed (best of three runs):
PID COMMAND %CPU TIME #TH #PRTS #MREGS RPRVT RSHRD RSIZE VSIZE
44381 godoc 0.0% 0:38.00 4 19 149 145M 184K 148M 176M
2010/12/03 17:58:35 index updated (39.231s, 18505 unique words, 386387 spots)
2010/12/03 17:58:35 bytes=90858456 footprint=199182584
2010/12/03 17:58:36 bytes=47858568 footprint=167295224
Old godoc, immediately after indexing completed (best of three runs):
PID COMMAND %CPU TIME #TH #PRTS #MREGS RPRVT RSHRD RSIZE VSIZE
23167 godoc 0.0% 0:22.02 4 17 132 129M 184K 132M 173M
2010/12/03 14:51:32 index updated (24.892s, 18765 unique words, 393830 spots)
2010/12/03 14:51:32 bytes=66404528 footprint=163907832
2010/12/03 14:51:32 bytes=46282224 footprint=163907832
The different numbers for unique words/spots stem from the fact the the
two workspaces are not exactly identical. The new godoc maintains a large
file set data structure during indexing which (probably) is the reason
for the larger heap (90858456 vs 66404528) before garbage collection.
R=rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3050041
bug299.go:16:2: error: expected field name
bug299.go:17:2: error: expected field name
bug299.go:18:3: error: expected field name
bug299.go:25:9: error: expected receiver name or type
bug299.go:26:10: error: expected receiver name or type
bug299.go:27:9: error: expected receiver name or type
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2150044
bug284.go:33: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:36: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type A2 as type A1)
bug284.go:37: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:38: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type A1 as type A2)
bug284.go:56: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:59: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type S2 as type S1)
bug284.go:60: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:61: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type S1 as type S2)
bug284.go:71: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:74: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type P2 as type P1)
bug284.go:75: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:76: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type P1 as type P2)
bug284.go:96: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:99: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Q2 as type Q1)
bug284.go:101: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type Q1 as type Q2)
bug284.go:111: error: invalid type conversion (different parameter types)
bug284.go:114: error: invalid type conversion (different parameter types)
bug284.go:115: error: invalid type conversion (different parameter types)
bug284.go:116: error: invalid type conversion (different parameter types)
bug284.go:134: error: invalid type conversion (incompatible type for method 'f' (different result types))
bug284.go:137: error: invalid type conversion (incompatible type for method 'f' (different result types))
bug284.go:138: error: invalid type conversion (incompatible type for method 'f' (different result types))
bug284.go:139: error: invalid type conversion (incompatible type for method 'f' (different result types))
bug284.go:149: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:152: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type L2 as type L1)
bug284.go:153: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:154: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type L1 as type L2)
bug284.go:164: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:167: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type L2 as type L1)
bug284.go:168: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:169: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type L1 as type L2)
bug284.go:179: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:182: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type C2 as type C1)
bug284.go:183: error: invalid type conversion
bug284.go:184: error: invalid type conversion (cannot use type C1 as type C2)
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2136041
bug278.go:18: error: invalid left hand side of assignment
bug278.go:19: error: array is not addressable
bug278.go:21: error: invalid left hand side of assignment
bug278.go:22: error: invalid left hand side of assignment
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2122042
The gccgo compiler is smart enough to not make something which
is not used. Use global variables to defeat this
optimization.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2129041
Another case where gccgo and gc report similar but not
identical errors for a recursive interface.
bug251.go:11: error: invalid recursive interface
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2094041
This introduces GC_ERROR to mark an error only issued by the
gc compiler. GCCGO_ERROR already exists to mark errors only
issued by the gccgo compiler. Obviously these should be used
sparingly.
bug195.go:9: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
bug195.go:12: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
bug195.go:15: error: interface contains embedded non-interface
bug195.go:18: error: invalid recursive interface
bug195.go:22: error: invalid recursive interface
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2040043
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
remove the print statements.
This change is because of the port of gccgo to RTEMS.
These tests use the GCC DejaGNU framework. In some cases,
the tests need to be run on qemu where the status code
cannot be sent back to DejaGNU, so it prints the exit status
by putting a wrapper around the exit and abort calls.
This testcase closes the stdout, and hence prohibits DejaGNU
from knowing the status in such cases, and causes this test
to be wrongly declared as a failure.
R=rsc, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1792042
* Code for assignment, conversions now mirrors spec.
* Changed some snprint -> smprint.
* Renamed runtime functions to separate
interface conversions from type assertions:
convT2I, assertI2T, etc.
* Correct checking of \U sequences.
Fixes#840.
Fixes#830.
Fixes#778.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1303042