The latest Go release, version 1.5, is a significant release, including major architectural changes to the implementation. Despite that, we expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before, because the release still maintains the Go 1 promise of compatibility.
The biggest developments in the implementation are:
GOMAXPROCS
set to the
number of cores available; in prior releases it defaulted to 1.
go
command now provides experimental
support for "vendoring" external dependencies.
These and a number of other changes to the implementation and tools are discussed below.
The release also contains one small language change involving map literals.
Finally, the timing of the release strays from the usual six-month interval, both to provide more time to prepare this major release and to shift the schedule thereafter to time the release dates more conveniently.
Due to an oversight, the rule that allowed the element type to be elided from slice literals was not applied to map keys. This has been corrected in Go 1.5. An example will make this clear: as of Go 1.5, this map literal,
m := map[Point]string{ Point{29.935523, 52.891566}: "Persepolis", Point{-25.352594, 131.034361}: "Uluru", Point{37.422455, -122.084306}: "Googleplex", }
may be written as follows, without the Point
type listed explicitly:
m := map[Point]string{ {29.935523, 52.891566}: "Persepolis", {-25.352594, 131.034361}: "Uluru", {37.422455, -122.084306}: "Googleplex", }
The compiler and runtime are now implemented in Go and assembler, without C.
The only C source left in the tree is related to testing or to cgo
.
There was a C compiler in the tree in 1.4 and earlier.
It was used to build the runtime; a custom compiler was necessary in part to
guarantee the C code would work with the stack management of goroutines.
Since the runtime is in Go now, there is no need for this C compiler and it is gone.
Details of the process to eliminate C are discussed elsewhere.
The conversion from C was done with the help of custom tools created for the job. Most important, the compiler was actually moved by automatic translation of the C code into Go. It is in effect the same program in a different language. It is not a new implementation of the compiler so we expect the process will not have introduced new compiler bugs. An overview of this process is available in the slides for this presentation.
Independent of but encouraged by the move to Go, the names of the tools have changed.
The old names 6g
, 8g
and so on are gone; instead there
is just one binary, accessible as go
tool
compile
,
that compiles Go source into binaries suitable for the architecture and operating system
specified by $GOARCH
and $GOOS
.
Similarly, there is now one linker (go
tool
link
)
and one assembler (go
tool
asm
).
The linker was translated automatically from the old C implementation,
but the assembler is a new native Go implementation discussed
in more detail below.
Similar to the drop of the names 6g
, 8g
, and so on,
the output of the compiler and assembler are now given a plain .o
suffix
rather than .8
, .6
, etc.
TODO
In Go 1.5, the order in which goroutines are scheduled has been changed. The properties of the scheduler were never defined by the language, but programs that depended on the scheduling order may be broken by this change. We have seen a few (erroneous) programs affected by this change. If you have programs that implicitly depend on the scheduling order, you will need to update them.
Another potentially breaking change is that the runtime now
sets the default number of threads to run simultaneously,
defined by GOMAXPROCS
, to the number
of cores available on the CPU.
In prior releases it defaulted to 1.
Programs that do not expect to run with multiple cores may
break inadvertently.
They can be updated by removing the restriction or by setting
GOMAXPROCS
explicitly.
Now that the Go compiler and runtime are implemented in Go, a Go compiler
must be available to compile the distribution from source.
Thus, to build the Go core, a working Go distribution must already be in place.
(Go programmers who do not work on the core are unaffected by this change.)
Any Go 1.4 or later distribution (including gccgo
) will serve.
For details, see the design document.
Due mostly to the industry's move away the 32-bit x86 architecture,
the set of binary downloads provided is reduced in 1.5.
A distribution for the OS X operating system is provided only for the
amd64
architecture, not 386
.
Similarly, the ports for Snow Leopard (Apple OS X 10.6) still work but are no
longer released as a download or maintained since Apple no longer maintains that version
of the operating system.
Also, the dragonfly/386
port is no longer supported at all
because DragonflyBSD itself no longer supports the 32-bit 386 architecture.
There are however several new ports available to be built from source.
These include darwin/arm
and darwin/arm64
.
The new port linux/arm64
is mostly in place, but cgo
is only supported using external linking.
On FreeBSD, Go 1.5 requires FreeBSD 8-STABLE+ because of its new use of the SYSCALL
instruction.
On NaCl, Go 1.5 requires SDK version pepper-39 or above because it now uses the
get_random_bytes
system call.
Tools: build: external linking support for windows (https://golang.org/cl/7163, 7282, 7283, 7284, 7534, 7535) cmd/cover: tool now lives in the standard repository (https://golang.org/cl/9560) cmd/gc: constant arithmetic is based on math/big (https://golang.org/cl/7830, 7851, 7857, 8426, 7858, 7912, 8171) cmd/go, go/build: add ${SRCDIR} variable expansion to cgo lines (https://golang.org/cl/1756) cmd/go: add $DOLLAR to generate's variables (https://golang.org/cl/8091) cmd/go: std wildcard now excludes commands in main repo (https://golang.org/cl/5550) cmd/go: .swig/.swigcxx files now require SWIG 3.0.6 or later cmd/go: add -run flag to go generate (https://golang.org/cl/9005) cmd/go: add $GOLINE to generate's variables (https://golang.org/cl/9007) cmd/go: add go doc (https://golang.org/cl/9227) cmd/go: internal enforced even outside standard library (golang.org/s/go14internal; https://golang.org/cl/9156) cmd/go, testing: add go test -count (https://golang.org/cl/10669) cmd/go: add preliminary support for vendor directories (https://golang.org/cl/10923) cmd/vet: better validation of struct tags (https://golang.org/cl/2685) cmd/ld: no longer record build timestamp in Windows PE file header (https://golang.org/cl/3740) cmd/go: add -toolexec build option cmd/go: drop -ccflags build option cmd/go: add -asmflags build option cmd/go: add -buildmode build option cmd/gc: add -dynlink option (for amd64 only) cmd/ld: add -buildmode option cmd/trace: new command to view traces (https://golang.org/cl/3601) Performance: cmd/gc: evaluate concrete == interface without allocating (https://golang.org/cl/2096) cmd/gc: optimize memclr of slices and arrays (https://golang.org/cl/2520) cmd/gc: transform closure calls to function calls (https://golang.org/cl/4050) cmd/gc: transitive inlining (https://golang.org/cl/5952) cmd/gc, runtime: speed up some cases of _, ok := i.(T) (https://golang.org/cl/7697) cmd/gc: speed up large string switches (https://golang.org/cl/7698) cmd/gc: inline x := y.(*T) and x, ok := y.(*T) (https://golang.org/cl/7862) cmd/gc: allocate backing storage for non-escaping interfaces on stack (https://golang.org/cl/8201) encoding/xml: avoid an allocation for tags without attributes (https://golang.org/cl/4160) image: many optimizations runtime: add ARM runtime.cmpstring and bytes.Compare (https://golang.org/cl/8010) runtime: do not scan maps when k/v do not contain pointers (https://golang.org/cl/3288) runtime: reduce thrashing of gs between ps (https://golang.org/cl/9872) sort: number of Sort performance optimizations (https://golang.org/cl/2100, https://golang.org/cl/2614, ...) strconv: optimize decimal to string conversion (https://golang.org/cl/2105) strconv: optimize float to string conversion (https://golang.org/cl/5600) sync: add active spinning to Mutex (https://golang.org/cl/5430) math/big: faster assembly kernels for amd64 and 386 (https://golang.org/cl/2503, https://golang.org/cl/2560) math/big: faster "pure Go" kernels for platforms w/o assembly kernels (https://golang.org/cl/2480) regexp: port RE2's bitstate backtracker to the regexp package (https://golang.org/cl/2153) Assembler: New cmd/asm tool (now use go tool asm, not go tool 6a) Assembler now supports -dynlink option. ARM assembly syntax has had some features removed. - mentioning SP or PC as a hardware register These are always pseudo-registers except that in some contexts they're not, and it's confusing because the context should not affect which register you mean. Change the references to the hardware registers to be explicit: R13 for SP, R15 for PC. - constant creation using assignment The files say a=b when they could instead say #define a b. There is no reason to have both mechanisms. - R(0) to refer to R0. Some macros use this to a great extent. Again, it's easy just to use a #define to rename a register. Also expression evaluation now uses uint64s instead of signed integers and the precedence of operators is now Go-like rather than C-like.
The flag package's
PrintDefaults
function, and method on FlagSet
,
have been modified to create nicer usage messages.
The format has been changed to be more human-friendly and in the usage
messages a word quoted with `backquotes` is taken to be the name of the
flag's operand to display in the usage message.
For instance, a flag created with the invocation,
cpuFlag = flag.Int("cpu", 1, "run `N` processes in parallel")
will show the help message,
-cpu N run N processes in parallel (default 1)
Also, the default is now listed only when it is not the zero value for the type.
The math/big
package
has a new, fundamental data type,
Float
,
which implements arbitrary-precision floating-point numbers.
A Float
value is represented by a boolean sign,
a variable-length mantissa, and a 32-bit fixed-size signed exponent.
The precision of a Float
(the mantissa size in bits)
can be specified explicitly or is otherwise determined by the first
operation that creates the value.
Once created, the size of a Float
's mantissa may be modified with the
SetPrec
method.
Floats
support the concept of infinities, such as are created by
overflow, but values that would lead to the equivalent of IEEE 754 NaNs
trigger a panic.
Float
operations support all IEEE-754 rounding modes.
When the precision is set to 24 (53) bits,
operations that stay within the range of normalized float32
(float64
)
values produce the same results as the corresponding IEEE-754
arithmetic on those values.
The reflect
package
has two new functions: ArrayOf
and FuncOf
.
These functions, analogous to the extant
SliceOf
function,
create new types at runtime to describe arrays and functions.
Several dozen bugs were found in the standard library
through randomized testing with the
go-fuzz
tool.
Bugs were fixed in the
archive/tar
,
archive/zip
,
compress/flate
,
encoding/gob
,
fmt
,
html/template
,
image/gif
,
image/jpeg
,
image/png
, and
text/template
,
packages.
The fixes harden the implementation against incorrect and malicious inputs.
archive/zip
package's
Writer
type now has a
SetOffset
method to specify the location within the output stream at which to write the archive.
Reader
in the
bufio
package now has a
Discard
method to discard data from the input.
bytes
package,
the Buffer
type
now has a Cap
method
that reports the number of bytes allocated within the buffer.
Similarly, both the bytes
and strings
packages,
the Reader
type now has a Size
method that reports the original length of the underlying slice or string.
bytes
and
strings
packages
also now have a LastIndexByte
function that locates the rightmost byte with that value in the argument.
DB
type of the
database/sql
package
now has a Stats
method
to retrieve database statistics.
encoding/base64
package
now supports unpadded encodings through two new encoding variables,
RawStdEncoding
and
RawURLEncoding
.
fmt
package,
a value of type Value
now
prints what it holds, rather than use the reflect.Value
's Stringer
method, which produces things like <int Value>
.
EmptyStmt
type
in the go/ast
package now
has a boolean Implicit
field that records whether the
semicolon was implicitly added or was present in the source.
go/build
package
reserves GOARCH
values for a number of architectures that Go might support one day.
This is not a promise that it will.
io
package
adds a CopyBuffer
function
that is like Copy
but
uses a caller-provided buffer, permitting control of allocation and buffer size.
log
package
has a new LUTC
flag
that causes time stamps to be printed in the UTC time zone.
It also adds a SetOutput
function
to set the output destination for the standard logger
and a corresponding method for user-created loggers.
Max
was not detecting all possible NaN bit patterns.
This is fixed in Go 1.5, so programs that use math.Max
on data including NaNs may behave differently,
but now correctly according to the IEEE754 definition of NaNs.
math/big
package
adds a new Jacobi
function for integers and a new method
ModSqrt
method for the Int
type.
mime
package adds an
ExtensionsByType
function that returns the MIME extensions know to be associated with a given MIME type.
mime/quotedprintable
package that implements the quoted-printable encoding defined by RFC 2045.
os
package
has a new LookupEnv
function
that is similar to Getenv
but can distinguish between an empty environment variable and a missing one.
os/signal
package
adds new Ignore
and
Reset
functions.
runtime/pprof
package
by default now includes overall memory statistics in all memory profiles.
strings
package
has a new Compare
function.
This is present to provide symmetry with the bytes
package
but is otherwise unnecessary as strings support comparison natively.
WaitGroup
function in
package sync
now diagnoses code that races a call to Add
against a return from Wait
.
If it detects this condition, WaitGroup
panics.
syscall
package,
the Linux SysProcAttr
struct now has a
GidMappingsEnableSetgroups
field, made necessary
by security changes in Linux 3.19.
On all Unix systems, the struct also has new Foreground
and Pgid
fields
to provide more control when exec'ing.
On Darwin, there is now a Syscall9
function
to support calls with too many arguments.
testing/quick
will now
generate nil
values for pointer types,
making it possible to use with recursive data structures.
Also, the package now supports generation of array types.
text/template
and
html/template
packages,
integer constants too large to be represented as a Go integer now trigger a
parse error. Before, they were silently converted to floating point, losing
precision.
text/template
and
html/template
packages,
a new Option
type
allows customization of the behavior of the template during execution.
The sole implemented option allows control over how a missing key is
handled when indexing a map.
The default, which can now be overridden, is as before: to continue with an invalid value.
time
package's
Time
type has a new method
AppendFormat
,
which can be used to avoid allocation when printing a time value.
unicode
package and associated
support throughout the system has been upgraded from version 7.0 to
Unicode 8.0.