%+q uses strconv.Quote[Rune]ToASCII, guaranteeing ASCII-only output.
%#U a quoted character if the rune is printable: 'x'=U+0078; otherwise
it's as before: U+000A.
R=golang-dev, gri, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4589047
It comes up often enough that it's time to provide
the utility of a standard package.
R=r, mirtchovski, adg, rsc, n13m3y3r, ality, go.peter.90, lstoakes, iant, jan.mercl, bsiegert, robert.hencke, rogpeppe, befelemepeseveze, kevlar
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4557047
With the ReadFrom change in the sendfile CL, it became
possible to illegally send a response to a HEAD request if you
did it via io.Copy.
Fixes#1939
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4584049
Thumb code and ARM pre-V4 code is unused,
unmaintained, and almost certainly wrong by now.
Every time I try to change 5l I have to sort out
what's dead code and what's not.
30% of lines of code in this directory deleted.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4601049
After allocparams and walk, remove unused auto variables
and re-layout the remaining in reverse alignment order.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4568068
5a: add SQRTF and SQRTD
5l: add ASQRTF and ASQRTD
Use ARMv7 VFP VSQRT instruction to speed up math.Sqrt
R=rsc, dave, m
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4551082
Via Russ Ross' bug report on golang-nuts, it was not possible
to send an HTTP request with a zero length body with either a
Content-Length (it was stripped) or chunking (it wasn't set).
This means Go couldn't upload 0-length objects to Amazon S3.
(which aren't as silly as they might sound, as S3 objects can
have key/values associated with them, set in the headers)
Amazon further doesn't supported chunked uploads. (not Go's
problem, but we should be able to let users set an explicit
Content-Length, even if it's zero.)
To fix the ambiguity of an explicit zero Content-Length and
the Request struct's default zero value, users need to
explicit set TransferEncoding to []string{"identity"} to force
the Request.Write to include a Content-Length: 0. identity is
in RFC 2616 but is ignored pretty much everywhere. We don't
even then serialize it on the wire, since it's kinda useless,
except as an internal sentinel value.
The "identity" value is then documented, but most users can
ignore that because NewRequest now sets that.
And adds more tests.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4603041
This replaces most the map[string][]string usage with
a new Values type name, with the usual methods.
It also changes client.PostForm to take a Values, rather
than a map[string]string, closing a TODO in the code.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4532123
- Added some additional examples.
- 6g appears to implement this semantics already.
Fixes#658.
R=rsc, r, iant, ken
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4538119
This change was adapted from gccgo's libgo/runtime/mem.c at
Ian Taylor's suggestion. It fixes all.bash failing with
"address space conflict: map() =" on amd64 Linux with kernel
version 2.6.32.8-grsec-2.1.14-modsign-xeon-64.
With this change, SysMap will use MAP_FIXED to allocate its desired
address space, after first calling mincore to check that there is
nothing else mapped there.
R=iant, dave, n13m3y3r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4438091
Three optimizations: First, special-case power of two bases
that partion a Word(), bases 2, 4, 16, and 256. These can
be moved directly from internal Word() storage to the output
without multiprecision operations. Next, same approach for
the other power-of-two bases, 8, 32, 64, and 128. These
don't fill a Word() evenly, so special handling is needed
for those cases where input spans the high-bits of one Word
and the low bis of the next one. Finally, implement the
general case for others bases in 2 <= base <= 256 using
superbases, the largest power of base representable in a
Word(). For base ten, this is 9 digits and a superbase of
10^9 for 32-bit Words and 19 digits and 10^19 for 64-bit
compiles. This way we do just 1/9th or 1/19th of the expensive
multiprecision divisions, unpacking superdigits using fast
native machine arithmetic. The resulting code runs 7x to
800x the speed of the previous approach, depending on the
length of the number to be converted--longer is relatively
faster.
Also, extended the tests and benchmarks for string to nat
(scan()) and nat to string (string()) functions. A further
enhancement awaits the next CL to make general cases about
7x faster for long cases.
R=gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4595041
Programs expect that Read and Write are synchronous.
The background goroutines make the implementation
a little easier, but they introduce asynchrony that
trips up calling code. Remove them.
R=golang-dev, nigeltao
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4548080
I started looking at this code because the nm in GNU
binutils was ignoring the first symbol in the .symtab
section. Apparently, the System V ABI reserves the
first entry and requires all fields inside to be set
to zero.
The list of changes is as follows:
· reserve the first symbol entry (as noted above)
· fix the section indices for .data and .bss symbols
· factor out common code for Elf32 and Elf64
· remove the special case for elfsymo in [568]l/asm.c:/^asmb
· add the "etext" symbol in 6l
· add static symbols
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4524075