Go 1.20 is not yet released. These are work-in-progress release notes. Go 1.20 is expected to be released in February 2023.
Go 1.20 includes four changes to the language.
Go 1.17 added conversions from slice to an array pointer.
Go 1.20 extends this to allow conversions from a slice to an array:
given a slice x
, [4]byte(x)
can now be written
instead of *(*[4]byte)(x)
.
The unsafe
package defines
three new functions SliceData
, String
, and StringData
.
Along with Go 1.17's Slice
, these functions now provide the complete ability to
construct and deconstruct slice and string values, without depending on their exact representation.
The specification now defines that struct values are compared one field at a time, considering fields in the order they appear in the struct type definition, and stopping at the first mismatch. The specification could previously have been read as if all fields needed to be compared beyond the first mismatch. Similarly, the specification now defines that array values are compared one element at a time, in increasing index order. In both cases, the difference affects whether certain comparisons must panic. Existing programs are unchanged: the new spec wording describes what the implementations have always done.
Comparable types (such as ordinary interfaces)
may now satisfy comparable
constraints, even if the type arguments
are not strictly comparable (comparison may panic at runtime).
This makes it possible to instantiate a type parameter constrained by comparable
(e.g., a type parameter for a user-defined generic map key) with a non-strictly comparable type argument
such as an interface type, or a composite type containing an interface type.
Go 1.20 is the last release that will run on any release of Windows 7, 8, Server 2008 and Server 2012. Go 1.21 will require at least Windows 10 or Server 2016.
Go 1.20 is the last release that will run on macOS 10.13 High Sierra or 10.14 Mojave. Go 1.21 will require macOS 10.15 Catalina or later.
Go 1.20 adds experimental support for FreeBSD on RISC-V (GOOS=freebsd
, GOARCH=riscv64
).
The directory $GOROOT/pkg
no longer stores
pre-compiled package archives for the standard library:
go
install
no longer writes them,
the go
build no longer checks for them,
and the Go distribution no longer ships them.
Instead, packages in the standard library are built as needed
and cached in the build cache, just like packages outside GOROOT
.
This change reduces the size of the Go distribution and also
avoids C toolchain skew for packages that use cgo.
The implementation of go
test
-json
has been improved to make it more robust.
Programs that run go
test
-json
do not need any updates.
Programs that invoke go
tool
test2json
directly should now run the test binary with -v=test2json
(for example, go
test
-v=test2json
or ./pkg.test
-test.v=test2json
)
instead of plain -v
.
A related change to go
test
-json
is the addition of an event with Action
set to start
at the beginning of each test program's execution.
When running multiple tests using the go
command,
these start events are guaranteed to be emitted in the same order as
the packages named on the command line.
The go
command now defines
architecture feature build tags, such as amd64.v2
,
to allow selecting a package implementation file based on the presence
or absence of a particular architecture feature.
See go
help
buildconstraint
for details.
The go
subcommands now accept
-C
<dir>
to change directory to <dir>
before performing the command, which may be useful for scripts that need to
execute commands in multiple different modules.
The go
build
and go
test
commands no longer accept the -i
flag,
which has been deprecated since Go 1.16.
The go
generate
command now accepts
-skip
<pattern>
to skip //go:generate
directives
matching <pattern>
.
The go
test
command now accepts
-skip
<pattern>
to skip tests, subtests, or examples
matching <pattern>
.
When the main module is located within GOPATH/src
,
go
install
no longer installs libraries for
non-main
packages to GOPATH/pkg
,
and go
list
no longer reports a Target
field for such packages. (In module mode, compiled packages are stored in the
build cache
only, but a bug had caused
the GOPATH
install targets to unexpectedly remain in effect.)
The go
build
, go
install
,
and other build-related commands now support a -pgo
flag that enables
profile-guided optimization, which is described in more detail in the
Compiler section below.
The -pgo
flag specifies the file path of the profile.
Specifying -pgo=auto
causes the go
command to search
for a file named default.pgo
in the main package's directory and
use it if present.
This mode currently requires a single main package to be specified on the
command line, but we plan to lift this restriction in a future release.
Specifying -pgo=off
turns off profile-guided optimization.
The go
build
, go
install
,
and other build-related commands now support a -cover
flag that builds the specified target with code coverage instrumentation.
This is described in more detail in the
Cover section below.
go
version
The go
version
-m
command
now supports reading more types of Go binaries, most notably, Windows DLLs
built with go
build
-buildmode=c-shared
and Linux binaries without execute permission.
The go
command now disables cgo
by default
on systems without a C toolchain.
More specifically, when the CGO_ENABLED
environment variable is unset,
the CC
environment variable is unset,
and the default C compiler (typically clang
or gcc
)
is not found in the path,
CGO_ENABLED
defaults to 0
.
As always, you can override the default by setting CGO_ENABLED
explicitly.
The most important effect of the default change is that when Go is installed on a system without a C compiler, it will now use pure Go builds for packages in the standard library that use cgo, instead of using pre-distributed package archives (which have been removed, as noted above) or attempting to use cgo and failing. This makes Go work better in some minimal container environments as well as on macOS, where pre-distributed package archives have not been used for cgo-based packages since Go 1.16.
The packages in the standard library that use cgo are net
,
os/user
, and
plugin
.
On macOS, the net
and os/user
packages have been rewritten not to use cgo:
the same code is now used for cgo and non-cgo builds as well as cross-compiled builds.
On Windows, the net
and os/user
packages have never used cgo.
On other systems, builds with cgo disabled will use a pure Go version of these packages.
On macOS, the race detector has been rewritten not to use cgo: race-detector-enabled programs can be built and run without Xcode. On Linux and other Unix systems, and on Windows, a host C toolchain is required to use the race detector.
Go 1.20 supports collecting code coverage profiles for programs (applications and integration tests), as opposed to just unit tests.
To collect coverage data for a program, build it with go
build
's -cover
flag, then run the resulting
binary with the environment variable GOCOVERDIR
set
to an output directory for coverage profiles.
See the
'coverage for integration tests' landing page for more on how to get started.
For details on the design and implementation, see the
proposal.
The vet
tool now reports references to loop variables following
a call to T.Parallel()
within subtest function bodies. Such references may observe the value of the
variable from a different iteration (typically causing test cases to be
skipped) or an invalid state due to unsynchronized concurrent access.
The tool also detects reference mistakes in more places. Previously it would only consider the last statement of the loop body, but now it recursively inspects the last statements within if, switch, and select statements.
The vet tool now reports use of the time format 2006-02-01 (yyyy-dd-mm)
with Time.Format
and
time.Parse
.
This format does not appear in common date standards, but is frequently
used by mistake when attempting to use the ISO 8601 date format
(yyyy-mm-dd).
Some of the garbage collector's internal data structures were reorganized to be both more space and CPU efficient. This change reduces memory overheads and improves overall CPU performance by up to 2%.
The garbage collector behaves less erratically with respect to goroutine assists in some circumstances.
Go 1.20 adds a new runtime/coverage
package
containing APIs for writing coverage profile data at
runtime from long-running and/or server programs that
do not terminate via os.Exit()
.
Go 1.20 adds preview support for profile-guided optimization (PGO).
PGO enables the toolchain to perform application- and workload-specific
optimizations based on run-time profile information.
Currently, the compiler supports pprof CPU profiles, which can be collected
through usual means, such as the runtime/pprof
or
net/http/pprof
packages.
To enable PGO, pass the path of a pprof profile file via the
-pgo
flag to go
build
,
as mentioned above.
Go 1.20 uses PGO to more aggressively inline functions at hot call sites.
Benchmarks for a representative set of Go programs show enabling
profile-guided inlining optimization improves performance about 3–4%.
We plan to add more profile-guided optimizations in future releases.
Note that profile-guided optimization is a preview, so please use it
with appropriate caution.
The Go 1.20 compiler upgraded its front-end to use a new way of handling the compiler's internal data, which fixes several generic-types bugs and enables local types in generic functions and methods.
The compiler now disallows anonymous interface cycles.
Go 1.18 and 1.19 saw regressions in build speed, largely due to the addition of support for generics and follow-on work. Go 1.20 improves build speeds by up to 10%, bringing it back in line with Go 1.17. Relative to Go 1.19, generated code performance is also generally slightly improved.
On Linux, the linker now selects the dynamic interpreter for glibc
or musl
at link time.
On Windows, the Go linker now supports modern LLVM-based C toolchains.
Go 1.20 uses go:
and type:
prefixes for compiler-generated
symbols rather than go.
and type.
.
This avoids confusion for user packages whose name starts with go.
.
The debug/gosym
package understands
this new naming convention for binaries built with Go 1.20 and newer.
When building a Go release from source and GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP
is not set,
previous versions of Go looked for a Go 1.4 or later bootstrap toolchain in the directory
$HOME/go1.4
(%HOMEDRIVE%%HOMEPATH%\go1.4
on Windows).
Go 1.18 and Go 1.19 looked first for $HOME/go1.17
or $HOME/sdk/go1.17
before falling back to $HOME/go1.4
,
in anticipation of requiring Go 1.17 for use when bootstrapping Go 1.20.
Go 1.20 does require a Go 1.17 release for bootstrapping, but we realized that we should
adopt the latest point release of the bootstrap toolchain, so it requires Go 1.17.13.
Go 1.20 looks for $HOME/go1.17.13
or $HOME/sdk/go1.17.13
before falling back to $HOME/go1.4
(to support systems that hard-coded the path $HOME/go1.4 but have installed
a newer Go toolchain there).
In the future, we plan to move the bootstrap toolchain forward approximately once a year,
and in particular we expect that Go 1.22 will require the final point release of Go 1.20 for bootstrap.
Go 1.20 adds a new crypto/ecdh
package
to provide explicit support for Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman key exchanges
over NIST curves and Curve25519.
Programs should use crypto/ecdh
instead of the lower-level functionality in
crypto/elliptic
for ECDH, and
third-party modules for more advanced use cases.
Go 1.20 expands support for error wrapping to permit an error to wrap multiple other errors.
An error e
can wrap more than one error by providing
an Unwrap
method that returns a []error
.
The errors.Is
and
errors.As
functions
have been updated to inspect multiply wrapped errors.
The fmt.Errorf
function
now supports multiple occurrences of the %w
format verb,
which will cause it to return an error that wraps all of those error operands.
The new function errors.Join
returns an error wrapping a list of errors.
The new
"net/http".ResponseController
type provides access to extended per-request functionality not handled by the
"net/http".ResponseWriter
interface.
Previously, we have added new per-request functionality by defining optional
interfaces which a ResponseWriter
can implement, such as
Flusher
. These interfaces
are not discoverable and clumsy to use.
The ResponseController
type provides a clearer, more discoverable way
to add per-handler controls. Two such controls also added in Go 1.20 are
SetReadDeadline
and SetWriteDeadline
, which allow setting
per-request read and write deadlines. For example:
func RequestHandler(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) { rc := http.NewResponseController(w) rc.SetWriteDeadline(time.Time{}) // disable Server.WriteTimeout when sending a large response io.Copy(w, bigData) }
The httputil.ReverseProxy
forwarding proxy includes a new
Rewrite
hook function, superseding the
previous Director
hook.
The Rewrite
hook accepts a
ProxyRequest
parameter,
which includes both the inbound request received by the proxy and the outbound
request that it will send.
Unlike Director
hooks, which only operate on the outbound request,
this permits Rewrite
hooks to avoid certain scenarios where
a malicious inbound request may cause headers added by the hook
to be removed before forwarding.
See issue #50580.
The ProxyRequest.SetURL
method routes the outbound request to a provided destination
and supersedes the NewSingleHostReverseProxy
function.
Unlike NewSingleHostReverseProxy
, SetURL
also sets the Host
header of the outbound request.
The
ProxyRequest.SetXForwarded
method sets the X-Forwarded-For
, X-Forwarded-Host
,
and X-Forwarded-Proto
headers of the outbound request.
When using a Rewrite
, these headers are not added by default.
An example of a Rewrite
hook using these features is:
proxyHandler := &httputil.ReverseProxy{ Rewrite: func(r *httputil.ProxyRequest) { r.SetURL(outboundURL) // Forward request to outboundURL. r.SetXForwarded() // Set X-Forwarded-* headers. r.Out.Header.Set("X-Additional-Header", "header set by the proxy") }, }
ReverseProxy
no longer adds a User-Agent
header
to forwarded requests when the incoming request does not have one.
As always, there are various minor changes and updates to the library, made with the Go 1 promise of compatibility in mind. There are also various performance improvements, not enumerated here.
When the GODEBUG=tarinsecurepath=0
environment variable is set,
Reader.Next
method
will now return the error ErrInsecurePath
for an entry with a file name that is an absolute path,
refers to a location outside the current directory, contains invalid
characters, or (on Windows) is a reserved name such as NUL
.
A future version of Go may disable insecure paths by default.
When the GODEBUG=zipinsecurepath=0
environment variable is set,
NewReader
will now return the error
ErrInsecurePath
when opening an archive which contains any file name that is an absolute path,
refers to a location outside the current directory, contains invalid
characters, or (on Windows) is a reserved names such as NUL
.
A future version of Go may disable insecure paths by default.
Reading from a directory file that contains file data will now return an error. The zip specification does not permit directory files to contain file data, so this change only affects reading from invalid archives.
The new
CutPrefix
and
CutSuffix
functions
are like TrimPrefix
and TrimSuffix
but also report whether the string was trimmed.
The new Clone
function
allocates a copy of a byte slice.
The new WithCancelCause
function
provides a way to cancel a context with a given error.
That error can be retrieved by calling the new Cause
function.
When using supported curves, all operations are now implemented in constant time. This led to an increase in CPU time between 5% and 30%, mostly affecting P-384 and P-521.
The new PrivateKey.ECDH
method
converts an ecdsa.PrivateKey
to an ecdh.PrivateKey
.
The PrivateKey.Sign
method
and the
VerifyWithOptions
function
now support signing pre-hashed messages with Ed25519ph,
indicated by an
Options.HashFunc
that returns
crypto.SHA512
.
They also now support Ed25519ctx and Ed25519ph with context,
indicated by setting the new
Options.Context
field.
The new field OAEPOptions.MGFHash
allows configuring the MGF1 hash separately for OAEP decryption.
crypto/rsa now uses a new, safer, constant-time backend. This causes a CPU
runtime increase for decryption operations between approximately 15%
(RSA-2048 on amd64) and 45% (RSA-4096 on arm64), and more on 32-bit architectures.
Encryption operations are approximately 20x slower than before (but still 5-10x faster than decryption).
Performance is expected to improve in future releases.
Programs must not modify or manually generate the fields of
PrecomputedValues
.
The new function XORBytes
XORs two byte slices together.
Parsed certificates are now shared across all clients actively using that certificate. The memory savings can be significant in programs that make many concurrent connections to a server or collection of servers sharing any part of their certificate chains.
For a handshake failure due to a certificate verification failure,
the TLS client and server now return an error of the new type
CertificateVerificationError
,
which includes the presented certificates.
ParsePKCS8PrivateKey
and
MarshalPKCS8PrivateKey
now support keys of type *crypto/ecdh.PrivateKey
.
ParsePKIXPublicKey
and
MarshalPKIXPublicKey
now support keys of type *crypto/ecdh.PublicKey
.
Parsing NIST curve keys still returns values of type
*ecdsa.PublicKey
and *ecdsa.PrivateKey
.
Use their new ECDH
methods to convert to the crypto/ecdh
types.
The new SetFallbackRoots
function allows a program to define a set of fallback root certificates in case an
operating system verifier or standard platform root bundle is unavailable at runtime.
It will most commonly be used with a new package, golang.org/x/crypto/x509roots/fallback,
which will provide an up to date root bundle.
Attempts to read from a SHT_NOBITS
section using
Section.Data
or the reader returned by Section.Open
now return an error.
Additional R_LARCH_*
constants are defined for use with LoongArch systems.
Additional R_PPC64_*
constants are defined for use with PPC64 ELFv2 relocations.
The constant value for R_PPC64_SECTOFF_LO_DS
is corrected, from 61 to 62.
Due to a change of Go's symbol naming conventions, tools that
process Go binaries should use Go 1.20's debug/gosym
package to
transparently handle both old and new binaries.
Additional IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_RISCV*
constants are defined for use with RISC-V systems.
The ReadVarint
and
ReadUvarint
functions will now return io.ErrUnexpectedEOF
after reading a partial value,
rather than io.EOF
.
The new Encoder.Close
method
can be used to check for unclosed elements when finished encoding.
The decoder now rejects element and attribute names with more than one colon,
such as <a:b:c>
,
as well as namespaces that resolve to an empty string, such as xmlns:a=""
.
The decoder now rejects elements that use different namespace prefixes in the opening and closing tag, even if those prefixes both denote the same namespace.
The new Join
function returns an error wrapping a list of errors.
The Errorf
function supports multiple occurrences of
the %w
format verb, returning an error that unwraps to the list of all arguments to %w
.
The new FormatString
function recovers the
formatting directive corresponding to a State
,
which can be useful in Formatter
.
implementations.
The new RangeStmt.Range
field
records the position of the range
keyword in a range statement.
The new File.FileStart
and File.FileEnd
fields
record the position of the start and end of the entire source file.
The new FileSet.RemoveFile
method
removes a file from a FileSet
.
Long-running programs can use this to release memory associated
with files they no longer need.
The new Satisfies
function reports
whether a type satisfies a constraint.
This change aligns with the new language semantics
that distinguish satisfying a constraint from implementing an interface.
The new OffsetWriter
wraps an underlying
WriterAt
and provides Seek
, Write
, and WriteAt
methods
that adjust their effective file offset position by a fixed amount.
The math/big package's wide scope and input-dependent timing make it ill-suited for implementing cryptography. The cryptography packages in the standard library no longer call non-trivial Int methods on attacker-controlled inputs. In the future, the determination of whether a bug in math/big is considered a security vulnerability will depend on its wider impact on the standard library.
The math/rand package now automatically seeds
the global random number generator
(used by top-level functions like Float64
and Int
) with a random value,
and the top-level Seed
function has been deprecated.
Programs that need a reproducible sequence of random numbers
should prefer to allocate their own random source, using rand.New(rand.NewSource(seed))
.
Programs that need the earlier consistent global seeding behavior can set
GODEBUG=randautoseed=0
in their environment.
The top-level Read
function has been deprecated.
In almost all cases, crypto/rand.Read
is more appropriate.
The ParseMediaType
function now allows duplicate parameter names,
so long as the values of the names are the same.
Methods of the Reader
type now wrap errors
returned by the underlying io.Reader
.
The LookupCNAME
function now consistently returns the contents
of a CNAME
record when one exists. Previously on Unix systems and
when using the pure Go resolver, LookupCNAME
would return an error
if a CNAME
record referred to a name that with no A
,
AAAA
, or CNAME
record. This change modifies
LookupCNAME
to match the previous behavior on Windows,
allowing LookupCNAME
to succeed whenever a
CNAME
exists.
Interface.Flags
now includes the new flag FlagRunning
,
indicating an operationally active interface. An interface which is administratively
configured but not active (for example, because the network cable is not connected)
will have FlagUp
set but not FlagRunning
.
The new Dialer.ControlContext
field contains a callback function
similar to the existing Dialer.Control
hook, that additionally
accepts the dial context as a parameter.
Control
is ignored when ControlContext
is not nil.
The Go DNS resolver recognizes the trust-ad
resolver option.
When options trust-ad
is set in resolv.conf
,
the Go resolver will set the AD bit in DNS queries. The resolver does not
make use of the AD bit in responses.
DNS resolution will detect changes to /etc/nsswitch.conf
and reload the file when it changes. Checks are made at most once every
five seconds, matching the previous handling of /etc/hosts
and /etc/resolv.conf
.
The ResponseWriter.WriteHeader
function now supports sending
1xx
status codes.
The new Server.DisableGeneralOptionsHandler
configuration setting
allows disabling the default OPTIONS *
handler.
The new Transport.OnProxyConnectResponse
hook is called
when a Transport
receives an HTTP response from a proxy
for a CONNECT
request.
The HTTP server now accepts HEAD requests containing a body, rather than rejecting them as invalid.
HTTP/2 stream errors returned by net/http
functions may be converted
to a golang.org/x/net/http2.StreamError
using
errors.As
.
Leading and trailing spaces are trimmed from cookie names, rather than being rejected as invalid. For example, a cookie setting of "name =value" is now accepted as setting the cookie "name".
The new IPv6LinkLocalAllRouters
and IPv6Loopback
functions
are the net/netip
equivalents of
net.IPv6loopback
and
net.IPv6linklocalallrouters
.
On Windows, the name NUL
is no longer treated as a special case in
Mkdir
and
Stat
.
On Windows, File.Stat
now uses the file handle to retrieve attributes when the file is a directory.
Previously it would use the path passed to
Open
, which may no longer be the file
represented by the file handle if the file has been moved or replaced.
This change modifies Open
to open directories without the
FILE_SHARE_DELETE
access, which match the behavior of regular files.
On Windows, File.Seek
now supports
seeking to the beginning of a directory.
The new Cmd
fields
Cancel
and
WaitDelay
specify the behavior of the Cmd
when its associated
Context
is canceled or its process exits with I/O pipes still
held open by a child process.
The new error SkipAll
terminates a Walk
immediately but successfully.
The new IsLocal
function reports whether a path is
lexically local to a directory.
For example, if IsLocal(p)
is true
,
then Open(p)
will refer to a file that is lexically
within the subtree rooted at the current directory.
The new Value.Comparable
and
Value.Equal
methods
can be used to compare two Value
s for equality.
Comparable
reports whether Equal
is a valid operation for a given Value
receiver.
The new Value.Grow
method
extends a slice to guarantee space for another n
elements.
The new Value.SetZero
method
sets a value to be the zero value for its type.
Go 1.18 introduced Value.SetIterKey
and Value.SetIterValue
methods.
These are optimizations: v.SetIterKey(it)
is meant to be equivalent to v.Set(it.Key())
.
The implementations incorrectly omitted a check for use of unexported fields that was present in the unoptimized forms.
Go 1.20 corrects these methods to include the unexported field check.
Go 1.19.2 and Go 1.18.7 included a security fix to the regular expression parser,
making it reject very large expressions that would consume too much memory.
Because Go patch releases do not introduce new API,
the parser returned syntax.ErrInternalError
in this case.
Go 1.20 adds a more specific error, syntax.ErrLarge
,
which the parser now returns instead.
Go 1.20 adds new Incomplete
marker type.
Code generated by cgo will use cgo.Incomplete
to mark an incomplete C type.
Go 1.20 adds new supported metrics,
including the current GOMAXPROCS
setting (/sched/gomaxprocs:threads
),
the number of cgo calls executed (/cgo/go-to-c-calls:calls
),
total mutex block time (/sync/mutex/wait/total
), and various measures of time
spent in garbage collection.
Time-based histogram metrics are now less precise, but take up much less memory.
Mutex profile samples are now pre-scaled, fixing an issue where old mutex profile samples would be scaled incorrectly if the sampling rate changed during execution.
Profiles collected on Windows now include memory mapping information that fixes symbolization issues for position-independent binaries.
The garbage collector's background sweeper now yields less frequently, resulting in many fewer extraneous events in execution traces.
The new
CutPrefix
and
CutSuffix
functions
are like TrimPrefix
and TrimSuffix
but also report whether the string was trimmed.
The new Clone
function
allocates a copy of a string.
The new Map
methods Swap
,
CompareAndSwap
, and
CompareAndDelete
allow existing map entries to be updated atomically.
On FreeBSD, compatibility shims needed for FreeBSD 11 and earlier have been removed.
On Linux, additional CLONE_*
constants
are defined for use with the SysProcAttr.Cloneflags
field.
On Linux, the new SysProcAttr.CgroupFD
and SysProcAttr.UseCgroupFD
fields
provide a way to place a child process into a specific cgroup.
The new method B.Elapsed
reports the current elapsed time of the benchmark, which may be useful for
calculating rates to report with ReportMetric
.
The new time layout constants DateTime
,
DateOnly
, and
TimeOnly
provide names for three of the most common layout strings used in a survey of public Go source code.
The new Time.Compare
method
compares two times.
Parse
now ignores sub-nanosecond precision in its input,
instead of reporting those digits as an error.
The Time.MarshalJSON
and
Time.UnmarshalJSON
methods
are now more strict about adherence to RFC 3339.
The new AppendRune
function appends the UTF-16 encoding of a given rune to a uint16 slice,
analogous to utf8.AppendRune
.