bytes.Equal is simpler to read and should also be faster because
of short-circuiting and assembly implementations.
Change generated automatically using:
gofmt -r 'bytes.Compare(a, b) == 0 -> bytes.Equal(a, b)'
gofmt -r 'bytes.Compare(a, b) != 0 -> !bytes.Equal(a, b)'
R=golang-dev, dave, adg, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7038051
This CL adds a flag parser that matches the semantics of Go's
package flag. It also changes the linkers and compilers to use
the new flag parser.
Command lines that used to work, like
8c -FVw
6c -Dfoo
5g -I/foo/bar
now need to be split into separate arguments:
8c -F -V -w
6c -D foo
5g -I /foo/bar
The new spacing will work with both old and new tools.
The new parser also allows = for arguments, as in
6c -D=foo
5g -I=/foo/bar
but that syntax will not work with the old tools.
In addition to matching standard Go binary flag parsing,
the new flag parser generates more detailed usage messages
and opens the door to long flag names.
The recently added gc flag -= has been renamed -complete.
R=remyoudompheng, daniel.morsing, minux.ma, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7035043
More cleanup in preparation for fixing issue 4069.
This CL replaces the three nearly identical copies of the
asmb ELF code with a single asmbelf function in elf.c.
In addition to the ELF code movement, remove the elfstr
array in favor of a simpler lookup, and identify sections by
name throughout instead of computing fragile indices.
The CL also replaces the three nearly identical copies of the
genasmsym code with a single genasmsym function in lib.c.
The ARM linker still compiles and generates binaries,
but I haven't tested the binaries. They may not work.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7062047
The Plan 9 symbol table format defines big-endian symbol values
for portability, but we want to be able to generate an ELF object file
and let the host linker link it, as part of the solution to issue 4069.
The symbol table itself, since it is loaded into memory at run time,
must be filled in by the final host linker, using relocation directives
to set the symbol values. On a little-endian machine, the linker will
only fill in little-endian values during relocation, so we are forced
to use little-endian symbol values.
To preserve most of the original portability of the symbol table
format, we make the table itself say whether it uses big- or
little-endian values. If the table begins with the magic sequence
fe ff ff ff 00 00
then the actual table begins after those six bytes and contains
little-endian symbol values. Otherwise, the table is in the original
format and contains big-endian symbol values. The magic sequence
looks like an "end of table" entry (the fifth byte is zero), so legacy
readers will see a little-endian table as an empty table.
All the gc architectures are little-endian today, so the practical
effect of this CL is to make all the generated tables little-endian,
but if a big-endian system comes along, ld will not generate
the magic sequence, and the various readers will fall back to the
original big-endian interpretation.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7066043
A few USED(xxx) additions and a couple of deletions of variable
initialisations that go unused. One questionable correction,
mirrored in 8l/asm.c, where the result of invocation of a function
shouldn't be used.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6736054
A new environment variable GO386 is introduced to choose between
code generation targeting 387 or SSE2. No auto-detection is
performed and the setting defaults to 387 to preserve previous
behaviour.
The patch is a reorganization of CL6549052 by rsc.
Fixes#3912.
R=minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6962043
Unnamed types like structs with embedded fields can have methods.
These methods are generated on-the-fly by the compiler and
it may happen for identical types in different packages.
The linker must accept these multiple definitions.
Fixes#4590.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev, remy
https://golang.org/cl/7030051
Before this CL, defining the variable worked fine, but then when
the implicit package-level init func was created, that caused a
name collision and a confusing error about the redeclaration.
Also add a test for issue 3705 (func init() needs body).
Fixes#4517.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7008045
An error during the compilation can be more precise
than an error at link time.
For 'func init', the error happens always: you can't forward
declare an init func because the name gets mangled.
For other funcs, the error happens only with the special
(and never used by hand) -= flag, which tells 6g the
package is pure go.
The go command now passes -= for pure Go packages.
Fixes#3705.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6996054
Ordinary variable load was assumed to be not worth saving,
but not if one of the function calls later might change
its value.
Fixes#4313.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6997047
The patch makes the compile user an ordinary package-local
symbol for the name of embedded fields of builtin type.
This is incompatible with the fix delivered for issue 2687
(revision 3c060add43fb) but fixes it in a different way, because
the explicit symbol on the field makes the typechecker able to
find it in lookdot.
Fixes#3552.
R=lvd, rsc, daniel.morsing
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6866047
The typechecking code was doing an extra, unnecessary
indirection.
Fixes#4458.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6998051
remove zerostack compiler experiment; will do at link time instead
««« original CL description
cmd/gc: add GOEXPERIMENT=zerostack to clear stack on function entry
This is expensive but it might be useful in cases where
people are suffering from false positives during garbage
collection and are willing to trade the CPU time for getting
rid of the false positives.
On the other hand it only eliminates false positives caused
by other function calls, not false positives caused by dead
temporaries stored in the current function call.
The 5g/6g/8g changes were pulled out of the history, from
the last time we needed to do this (to work around a goto bug).
The code in go.h, lex.c, pgen.c is new but tiny.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6938073
»»»
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7002051
A fatal error used to happen when escassign-ing a multiple
function return to a single node. However, the situation
naturally appears when using "go f(g())" or "defer f(g())",
because g() is escassign-ed to sink.
Fixes#4529.
R=golang-dev, lvd, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6920060
The OpenBSD ld.so(1) does not currently support PT_TLS and refuses
to load ELF binaries that contain PT_TLS sections. Do not emit PT_TLS
sections - we will handle this appropriately in runtime/cgo instead.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6846064
This is expensive but it might be useful in cases where
people are suffering from false positives during garbage
collection and are willing to trade the CPU time for getting
rid of the false positives.
On the other hand it only eliminates false positives caused
by other function calls, not false positives caused by dead
temporaries stored in the current function call.
The 5g/6g/8g changes were pulled out of the history, from
the last time we needed to do this (to work around a goto bug).
The code in go.h, lex.c, pgen.c is new but tiny.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6938073
The code:
func main() {
v := make([]int64, 10)
i := 1
_ = v[(i*4)/3]
}
crashes compiler with:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x000000000043c274 in walkexpr (np=0x7fffffffc9b8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:587
587 *init = concat(*init, n->ninit);
(gdb) bt
#0 0x000000000043c274 in walkexpr (np=0x7fffffffc9b8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:587
#1 0x0000000000432d15 in copyexpr (n=0x7ffff7f69a48, t=<optimized out>, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/subr.c:2020
#2 0x000000000043f281 in walkdiv (init=0x0, np=0x7fffffffca70) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:2901
#3 walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69760, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:956
#4 0x000000000043d801 in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69bc0, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:988
#5 0x000000000043cc9b in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69d38, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:1068
#6 0x000000000043c50b in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f69f50, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:879
#7 0x000000000043c50b in walkexpr (np=0x7ffff7f6a0c8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:879
#8 0x0000000000440a53 in walkexprlist (l=0x7ffff7f6a0c8, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:357
#9 0x000000000043d0bf in walkexpr (np=0x7fffffffd318, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:566
#10 0x00000000004402bf in vmkcall (fn=<optimized out>, t=0x0, init=0x0, va=0x7fffffffd368) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:2275
#11 0x000000000044059a in mkcall (name=<optimized out>, t=0x0, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/walk.c:2287
#12 0x000000000042862b in callinstr (np=0x7fffffffd4c8, init=0x7fffffffd568, wr=0, skip=<optimized out>) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:478
#13 0x00000000004288b7 in racewalknode (np=0x7ffff7f68108, init=0x7fffffffd568, wr=0, skip=0) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:287
#14 0x0000000000428781 in racewalknode (np=0x7ffff7f65840, init=0x7fffffffd568, wr=0, skip=0) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:302
#15 0x0000000000428abd in racewalklist (l=0x7ffff7f65840, init=0x0) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:97
#16 0x0000000000428d0b in racewalk (fn=0x7ffff7f5f010) at src/cmd/gc/racewalk.c:63
#17 0x0000000000402b9c in compile (fn=0x7ffff7f5f010) at src/cmd/6g/../gc/pgen.c:67
#18 0x0000000000419f86 in funccompile (n=0x7ffff7f5f010, isclosure=0) at src/cmd/gc/dcl.c:1414
#19 0x0000000000424161 in p9main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at src/cmd/gc/lex.c:431
#20 0x0000000000401739 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at src/lib9/main.c:35
The problem is nil init passed to mkcall().
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6940045
Ignore signals during "go run" and wait for running child
process to exit. Stop executing further tests during "go test",
wait for running tests to exit and report error exit code.
Original CL 6351053 by dfc.
Fixes#3572.
Fixes#3581.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6903061
5g: Prog went from 128 bytes to 88 bytes
6g: Prog went from 174 bytes to 144 bytes
8g: Prog went from 124 bytes to 92 bytes
There may be a little more that can be squeezed out of Addr, but alignment will be a factor.
All: remove the unused pun field from Addr
R=rsc, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6922048
Change suggested by iant. The compiler generates
special code for a/b when a is -0x80...0 and b = -1.
A single instruction can cover the case where b is -1,
so only one comparison is needed.
Fixes#3551.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6922049
The code inside the casee and casep labels can perfectly be merged since
they essentially do the same. The character to be stored where cp points is
just the character contained by the c variable.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845112
This check for BADWIDTH might happen while in defercheckwidth, making it raise errors for non-erroneous situations.
Fixes#4495.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6927043
Fixes#4492.
% go version
go version devel +6b602ab487d6 Sat Dec 08 14:43:00 2012 +0100 linux/amd64
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6906058
The fixjmp step eliminates redundant chains of JMP
instructions that are produced by the compiler during
code generation.
It is already implemented in gc, and can be adapted to 6c/8c with
the exception that JMPs refer to destination by pc instead of by
pointer. The algorithm is modified to operate on Regs instead of Progs
for this reason. The pcs are already restored later by regopt.
R=goalng-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6865046
Add missing file that should have been included in CL 6854063 / 5eac1a2d6fc3
R=remyoudompheng, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6891049
The 0-length part is fine, but some callers that write 0 bytes
also pass nil as the data pointer, and the Plan 9 kernel kills the
process with 'invalid address in sys call' in that case.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6862051
Used to say:
issue4251.go:12: inverted slice range
issue4251.go:12: constant -1 overflows uint64
issue4251.go:16: inverted slice range
issue4251.go:16: constant -1 overflows uint64
issue4251.go:20: inverted slice range
issue4251.go:20: constant -1 overflows uint64
With this patch, only gives the "inverted slice range" errors.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6871058
Fixes#4396.
For fixed arrays larger than the unmapped page, agenr would general a nil check by loading the first word of the array. However there is no requirement for the first element of a byte array to be word aligned, so this check causes a trap on ARMv5 hardware (ARMv6 since relaxed that restriction, but it probably still comes at a cost).
Switching the check to MOVB ensures alignment is not an issue. This check is only invoked in a few places in the code where large fixed arrays are embedded into structs, compress/lzw is the biggest offender, and switching to MOVB has no observable performance penalty.
Thanks to Rémy and Daniel Morsing for helping me debug this on IRC last night.
R=remyoudompheng, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6854063
The debian/kFreeBSD project uses the FreeBSD kernel and the debian userspace. From our point of view, this is freebsd not linux as GOOS talks about the kernel syscall interface, not the userspace (although cgo alters that). As debian/kFreeBSD is experimental at this time, I do not think it is worth the effort of duplicating all the freebsd specific code so this is proposal represents a reasonable workaround.
Currently cgo is not supported, make.bash will detect this and disable cgo automatically during the build.
dfc@debian:~/go/src$ uname -a
GNU/kFreeBSD debian 8.1-1-686 #0 Sat Jul 21 17:02:04 UTC 2012 i686 i386 Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2415M CPU @ 2.30GHz GNU/kFreeBSD
dfc@debian:~/go/src$ ../bin/go version
go version devel +d05272f402ec Sat Dec 01 15:15:14 2012 -0800
Tested with GOOS=freebsd GOARCH=386
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6868046
The compiler was confused when inlining a T.Method(f()) call
where f returns multiple values: support for this was marked
as TODO.
Variadic calls are not supported but are not inlined either.
Add a test preventively for that case.
Fixes#4167.
R=golang-dev, rsc, lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6871043
`godoc net/http` used to complain "/target contains more than one package: http, main"
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852100
W/o this change stack traces do not show from where sync.Once()
or atomic.XXX was called.
This change add funcenter/exit instrumentation to sync/sync.atomic
packages.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6854112
Package format is a utility package that takes care of
parsing, sorting of imports, and formatting of .go source
using the canonical gofmt formatting parameters.
Use go/format in various clients instead of the lower-level components.
R=r, bradfitz, dave, rogpeppe, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6852075
This allows 5g and 8g to benefit from the rewrite as shifts
or magic multiplies. The 64-bit arithmetic is not handled there,
and left in 6g.
Update #2230.
R=golang-dev, dave, mtj, iant, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6819123
Bools from comparisons can be assigned to all bool types, but this idealness would propagate through logical operators when the result should have been lowered to a non-ideal form.
Fixes#3924.
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng, r, rsc, mtj
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6855061
The stack overflow checker in the linker uses the spadj field
to determine whether stack space will be large enough or not.
When spadj=0, the checker treats the function as a nosplit
and emits an error although the program is correct.
Also enable the stack checker in 8l.
Fixes#4316.
R=rsc, golang-dev
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6855088
The 8l linker automatically inserts XCHG instructions
to support otherwise impossible byte registers
(only available on AX, BX, CX, DX).
Sometimes AX or DX is needed (for MUL and DIV) so
we need to avoid clobbering them.
R=golang-dev, dave, iant, iant, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6846057
This CL starts to introduce IPv6 scoped addressing capability
into the net package.
The Public API changes are:
+pkg net, type IPAddr struct, Zone string
+pkg net, type IPNet struct, Zone string
+pkg net, type TCPAddr struct, Zone string
+pkg net, type UDPAddr struct, Zone string
Update #4234.
R=rsc, bradfitz, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6849045
Check the return value from malloc - do not assume that we were
allocated memory just because we asked for it.
Update #4415.
R=minux.ma, daniel.morsing, remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6782100
Saves 5 seconds on my machine. If Issue 4380 is fixed this
clone can be removed.
Update #4380
R=golang-dev, remyoudompheng, minux.ma, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6845058
In order to add these, we need to be able to find references
to such types that already exist in the binary. To do that, introduce
a new linker section holding a list of the types corresponding to
arrays, chans, maps, and slices.
To offset the storage cost of this list, and to simplify the code,
remove the interface{} header from the representation of a
runtime type. It was used in early versions of the code but was
made obsolete by the kind field: a switch on kind is more efficient
than a type switch.
In the godoc binary, removing the interface{} header cuts two
words from each of about 10,000 types. Adding back the list of pointers
to array, chan, map, and slice types reintroduces one word for
each of about 500 types. On a 64-bit machine, then, this CL *removes*
a net 156 kB of read-only data from the binary.
This CL does not include the needed support for precise garbage
collection. I have created issue 4375 to track that.
This CL also does not set the 'algorithm' - specifically the equality
and copy functions - for a new array correctly, so I have unexported
ArrayOf for now. That is also part of issue 4375.
Fixes#2339.
R=r, remyoudompheng, mirtchovski, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6572043
This patch introduces a sort of pre-regopt peephole optimization.
When a temporary is introduced that just holds a value for the
duration of the next instruction and is otherwise unused, we
elide it to make the job of regopt easier.
Since x86 has very few registers, this situation happens very
often. The result is large savings in stack variables for
arithmetic-heavy functions.
crypto/aes
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkEncrypt 1301 392 -69.87%
BenchmarkDecrypt 1309 368 -71.89%
BenchmarkExpand 2913 1036 -64.44%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkEncrypt 12.29 40.74 3.31x
BenchmarkDecrypt 12.21 43.37 3.55x
crypto/md5
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkHash8Bytes 1761 914 -48.10%
BenchmarkHash1K 16912 5570 -67.06%
BenchmarkHash8K 123895 38286 -69.10%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkHash8Bytes 4.54 8.75 1.93x
BenchmarkHash1K 60.55 183.83 3.04x
BenchmarkHash8K 66.12 213.97 3.24x
bench/go1
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 8364835000 8303154000 -0.74%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 7511723000 6381729000 -15.04%
BenchmarkGobDecode 27764090 27103270 -2.38%
BenchmarkGobEncode 11240880 11184370 -0.50%
BenchmarkGzip 1470224000 856668400 -41.73%
BenchmarkGunzip 240660800 201697300 -16.19%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 155225800 185571900 +19.55%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 243347900 282123000 +15.93%
BenchmarkMandelbrot200 12240970 12201880 -0.32%
BenchmarkParse 8837445 8765210 -0.82%
BenchmarkRevcomp 2556310000 1868566000 -26.90%
BenchmarkTemplate 389298000 379792000 -2.44%
benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup
BenchmarkGobDecode 27.64 28.32 1.02x
BenchmarkGobEncode 68.28 68.63 1.01x
BenchmarkGzip 13.20 22.65 1.72x
BenchmarkGunzip 80.63 96.21 1.19x
BenchmarkJSONEncode 12.50 10.46 0.84x
BenchmarkJSONDecode 7.97 6.88 0.86x
BenchmarkParse 6.55 6.61 1.01x
BenchmarkRevcomp 99.43 136.02 1.37x
BenchmarkTemplate 4.98 5.11 1.03x
Fixes#4035.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6828056
The patch adds more cases to agenr to allocate registers later,
and makes 6g generate addresses for sgen in something else than
SI and DI. It avoids a complex save/restore sequence that
amounts to allocate a register before descending in subtrees.
Fixes#4207.
R=golang-dev, dave, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817080
xtramodes' C_PBIT optimisation transforms:
MOVW 0(R3),R1
ADD $4,R3,R3
into:
MOVW.P 4(R3),R1
and the AADD optimisation tranforms:
ADD R0,R1
MOVBU 0(R1),R0
into:
MOVBU R0<<0(R1),R0
5g does not appear to generate sequences that
can be transformed by xtramodes' AMOVW.
R=remyoudompheng, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817085
On ARM, char is unsigned, and the code generation for
multiplication gets totally broken.
Fixes#4354.
R=golang-dev, dave, minux.ma, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6826079
Currently it works incorrectly if user specifies own build tags
and with race detection (e.g. runtime/race is not selected,
because it contains only test files with +build race).
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6814107
When exporting a body containing
x, ok := v.(Type)
the definition for Type was not being included, so when the body
was actually used, it would cause an "unknown type" compiler error.
Fixes#4370.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6827064
This is blocking me submitting the net fd timeout
CL, since goapi chokes on my constant.
The much more extensive fix to goapi's type checker
in pending review in https://golang.org/cl/6742050
But I'd rather get this quick fix in first.
R=golang-dev, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6818104
The code assumed that the only choices were EscNone, EscScope, and EscHeap,
so that it makes sense to set EscScope only if the current setting is EscNone.
Now that we have the many variants of EscReturn, this logic is false, and it was
causing important EscScopes to be ignored in favor of EscReturn.
Fixes#4360.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev, lvd
https://golang.org/cl/6816103
Avoids problems with local declarations shadowing other names.
We write a more explicit form than the incoming program, so there
may be additional type annotations. For example:
int := "hello"
j := 2
would normally turn into
var int string = "hello"
var j int = 2
but the int variable shadows the int type in the second line.
This CL marks all local variables with a per-function sequence number,
so that this would instead be:
var int·1 string = "hello"
var j·2 int = 2
Fixes#4326.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6816100
Current racewalk transformation looks like:
x := <-makeChan().c
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
runtime.raceread(&makeChan().c)
x := <-makeChan().c
and so makeChan() is called twice.
With this CL the transformation looks like:
x := <-makeChan().c
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
chan *tmp = &(makeChan().c)
raceread(&*tmp)
x := <-(*tmp)
Fixes#4245.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6822075
It is refactoring towards generic walk
+ it handles mode nodes.
Partially fixes 4228 issue.
R=golang-dev, lvd, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6775098
Unlike when using -http, godoc -url didn't initialize the "filesystem"
and metadata that are used when generating responses. This CL adds this
initialization, so that -url provides the same results as an HTTP
request when using -http.
Fixes#4335.
R=golang-dev, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6817075
When the first result of a type assertion is blank, the compiler would still copy out a potentially large non-interface type.
Fixes#1021.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6812079
The test for this is test/index.go, which is not run by
default. That test does not currently pass even after this is
applied, due to issue 4348.
Fixes#4344.
R=golang-dev, daniel.morsing, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6815085
Currently the build fails with -race if a package in GOPATH
imports another package in GOPATH.
R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6811083
This CL is a backport of 6012049 which improves code
generation for shift operations.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkLSL 9 5 -49.67%
BenchmarkLSR 9 4 -50.00%
R=golang-dev, minux.ma, r, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6813045
It happens that blocks are used for function calls in a
quite low-level way so they cannot be instrumented as
usual.
Blocks are also used for inlined functions.
R=golang-dev, rsc, dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6821068
Compiling expressions like:
s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[i]]]]]]]]]]]]
make 5g and 6g run out of registers. Such expressions can arise
if a slice is used to represent a permutation and the user wants
to iterate it.
This is due to the usual problem of allocating registers before
going down the expression tree, instead of allocating them in a
postfix way.
The functions cgenr and agenr (that generate a value to a newly
allocated register instead of an existing location), are either
introduced or modified when they already existed to allocate
the new register as late as possible, and sudoaddable is disabled
for OINDEX nodes so that igen/agenr is used instead.
Update #4207.
R=dave, daniel.morsing, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6733055
This is an experiment in static analysis of Go programs
to understand which struct fields a program might use.
It is not part of the Go language specification, it must
be enabled explicitly when building the toolchain,
and it may be removed at any time.
After building the toolchain with GOEXPERIMENT=fieldtrack,
a specific field can be marked for tracking by including
`go:"track"` in the field tag:
package pkg
type T struct {
F int `go:"track"`
G int // untracked
}
To simplify usage, only named struct types can have
tracked fields, and only exported fields can be tracked.
The implementation works by making each function begin
with a sequence of no-op USEFIELD instructions declaring
which tracked fields are accessed by a specific function.
After the linker's dead code elimination removes unused
functions, the fields referred to by the remaining
USEFIELD instructions are the ones reported as used by
the binary.
The -k option to the linker specifies the fully qualified
symbol name (such as my/pkg.list) of a string variable that
should be initialized with the field tracking information
for the program. The field tracking string is a sequence
of lines, each terminated by a \n and describing a single
tracked field referred to by the program. Each line is made
up of one or more tab-separated fields. The first field is
the name of the tracked field, fully qualified, as in
"my/pkg.T.F". Subsequent fields give a shortest path of
reverse references from that field to a global variable or
function, corresponding to one way in which the program
might reach that field.
A common source of false positives in field tracking is
types with large method sets, because a reference to the
type descriptor carries with it references to all methods.
To address this problem, the CL also introduces a comment
annotation
//go:nointerface
that marks an upcoming method declaration as unavailable
for use in satisfying interfaces, both statically and
dynamically. Such a method is also invisible to package
reflect.
Again, all of this is disabled by default. It only turns on
if you have GOEXPERIMENT=fieldtrack set during make.bash.
R=iant, ken
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6749064
1. Prepend racefuncenter() to fn->enter -- fn->enter can contain new() calls,
and we want them to be in the scope of the function.
2. Dump fn->enter and fn->exit.
3. Add TODO that OTYPESW expression can contain interesting memory accesses.
4. Ignore only _ names instead of all names starting with _.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6822048
Use wrapper functions to tell scheduler what we are doing.
With this patch, and a separate patch to the go tool, all the
cgo tests pass with gccgo.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6812058
* Use -fgo-pkgpath and -gccgopkgpath rather than -fgo-prefix
and -gccgoprefix.
* Define GOPKGPATH when compiling .c or .s files for gccgo.
* Use -fgo-relative-import-path.
* Produce .o files for gccgo, not .[568] files.
* Pass -E when linking if using cgo.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6820064
The idea is to (1) process ninit of all nodes,
and (2) put instrumentation of ninit into the nodes themselves (not the top-level statement ninit).
Fixes#4304.
R=golang-dev, rsc
CC=golang-dev, lvd
https://golang.org/cl/6818049
When local declarations needed unexported types, these could
be missing in the export data.
Fixes build with -gcflags -lll, except for exp/gotype.
R=golang-dev, rsc, lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6813067
This should make the compiler emit errors specific to the bounds checking instead of overflow errors on the underlying types.
Updates #4232.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6783054
Plan 9 and Go's lib9/fmt disagree on whether %#x includes the 0x prefix
when printing 0, because ANSI C gave bad advice long ago.
Avoiding that case makes binaries compiled on different systems compatible.
R=ken2
CC=akumar, golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6814066
compiler_rt introduces a weak and hidden symbol compilerrt_abort_impl
into our pre-linked _all.o object, we have to handle it.
Fixes#4273.
R=iant, rsc, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6783050