NOTE: This is a DRAFT of the Go 1.6 release notes, prepared for the Go 1.6 beta. Go 1.6 has NOT yet been released. By our regular schedule, it is expected some time in February 2016.
The latest Go release, version 1.6, arrives six months after 1.5. Most of its changes are in the implementation of the language, runtime, and libraries. There are no changes to the language specification. As always, the release maintains the Go 1 promise of compatibility. We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before.
The release adds new ports to Linux on 64-bit MIPS and Android on 32-bit x86; defined and enforced rules for sharing Go pointers with C; transparent, automatic support for HTTP/2; and a new mechanism for template reuse.
There are no language changes in this release.
Go 1.6 adds experimental ports to
Linux on 64-bit MIPS (linux/mips64
and linux/mips64le
).
These ports support cgo
but only with internal linking.
Go 1.6 also adds an experimental port to Android on 32-bit x86 (android/386
).
On FreeBSD, Go 1.6 defaults to using clang
, not gcc
, as the external C compiler.
On Linux on little-endian 64-bit PowerPC (linux/ppc64le
),
Go 1.6 now supports cgo
with external linking and
is roughly feature complete.
On NaCl, Go 1.5 required SDK version pepper-41. Go 1.6 adds support for later SDK versions.
TODO: CX no longer available on 386 assembly? (https://golang.org/cl/16386)
There is one major change to cgo
, along with one minor change.
The major change is the definition of rules for sharing Go pointers with C code,
to ensure that such C code can coexist with Go's garbage collector.
Briefly, Go and C may share memory allocated by Go
when a pointer to that memory is passed to C as part of a cgo
call,
provided that the memory itself contains no pointers to Go-allocated memory,
and provided that C does not retain the pointer after the call returns.
These rules are checked by the runtime during program execution:
if the runtime detects a violation, it prints a diagnosis and crashes the program.
The checks can be disabled by setting the environment variable
GODEBUG=cgocheck=0
, but note that the vast majority of
code identified by the checks is subtly incompatible with garbage collection
in one way or another.
Disabling the checks will typically only lead to more mysterious failure modes.
Fixing the code in question should be strongly preferred
over turning off the checks.
See the cgo
documentation for more details.
The minor change is
the addition of explicit C.complexfloat
and C.complexdouble
types,
separate from Go's complex64
and complex128
.
Matching the other numeric types, C's complex types and Go's complex type are
no longer interchangeable.
The compiler toolchain is mostly unchanged. Internally, the most significant change is that the parser is now hand-written instead of generated from yacc.
The compiler, linker, and go
command have new flag -msan
,
analogous to -race
and only available on linux/amd64,
that enables interoperation with the Clang MemorySanitizer.
Such interoperation useful mainly for testing a program containing suspect C or C++ code.
The linker has a new option -libgcc
to set the expected location
of the C compiler support library when linking cgo
code.
The option is only consulted when using -linkmode=internal
,
and it may be set to none
to disable the use of a support library.
TODO: Something about build modes.
As a reminder, the linker's -X
flag changed in Go 1.5.
In Go 1.4 and earlier, it took two arguments, as in
-X importpath.name value
Go 1.5 added an alternative syntax using a single argument
that is itself a name=value
pair:
-X importpath.name=value
In Go 1.5 the old syntax was still accepted, after printing a warning suggesting use of the new syntax instead. Go 1.6 continues to accept the old syntax and print the warning. Go 1.7 will remove support for the old syntax.
The release schedules for the GCC and Go projects do not coincide. GCC release 5 contains the Go 1.4 version of gccgo. The next release, GCC 6, will have the Go 1.5 version of gccgo. Due to release scheduling, it is likely that Go 1.6 will not be in a GCC release until GCC 7.
The go
command's basic operation
is unchanged, but there are a number of changes worth noting.
Go 1.5 introduced experimental support for vendoring,
enabled by setting the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT
environment variable to 1
.
Go 1.6 keeps the vendoring support, no longer considered experimental,
and enables it by default.
It can be disabled explicitly by setting
the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT
environment variable to 0
.
Go 1.7 will remove support for the environment variable.
The most likely problem caused by enabling vendoring by default happens
in source trees containing an existing directory named vendor
that
does not expect to be interpreted according to new vendoring semantics.
In this case, the simplest fix is to rename the directory to anything other
than vendor
and update any affected import paths.
For details about vendoring,
see the documentation for the go
command
and the design document.
There is a new build flag, -msan
,
that compiles Go with support for the LLVM memory sanitizer.
This is intended mainly for use when linking against C or C++ code
that is being checked with the memory sanitizer.
Go 1.5 introduced the
go doc
command,
which allows references to packages using only the package name, as in
go
doc
http
.
In the event of ambiguity, the Go 1.5 behavior was to use the package
with the lexicographically earliest import path.
In Go 1.6, ambiguity is resolved by preferring import paths with
fewer elements, breaking ties using lexicographic comparison.
An important effect of this change is that original copies of packages
are now preferred over vendored copies.
Successful searches also tend to run faster.
The go vet
command now diagnoses
passing function or method values as arguments to Printf
,
such as when passing f
where f()
was intended.
As always, the changes are so general and varied that precise statements about performance are difficult to make. Some programs may run faster, some slower. On average the programs in the Go 1 benchmark suite run a few percent faster in Go 1.6 than they did in Go 1.5. The garbage collector's pauses are even lower than in Go 1.5, although the effect is likely only noticeable for programs using a large amount of memory.
There have been significant optimizations bringing more than 10% improvements
to implementations of the
compress/bzip2
,
compress/gzip
,
crypto/aes
,
crypto/elliptic
,
crypto/ecdsa
, and
sort
packages.
Go 1.6 adds transparent support in the
net/http
package
for the new HTTP/2 protocol.
Go clients and servers will automatically use HTTP/2 as appropriate when using HTTPS.
There is no exported API specific to details of the HTTP/2 protocol handling,
just as there is no exported API specific to HTTP/1.1.
Programs that must disable HTTP/2 can do so by setting
Transport.TLSNextProto
(for clients)
or
Server.TLSNextProto
(for servers)
to a non-nil, empty map.
Programs that must adjust HTTP/2 protocol-specific details can import and use
golang.org/x/net/http2
,
in particular its
ConfigureServer
and
ConfigureTransport
functions.
For program-ending panics, the runtime now by default
prints only the stack of the running goroutine,
not all existing goroutines.
Usually only the current goroutine is relevant to a panic,
so omitting the others significantly reduces irrelevant output
in a crash message.
To see the stacks from all goroutines in crash messages, set the environment variable
GOTRACEBACK
to all
and rerun the program.
See the runtime documentation for details.
The runtime has added lightweight, best-effort detection of concurrent misuse of maps. As always, if one goroutine is writing to a map, no other goroutine should be reading or writing the map concurrently. If the runtime detects this condition, it prints a diagnosis and crashes the program. The best way to find out more about the problem is to run the program under the race detector, which will more reliably identify the race and give more detail.
The
reflect
package has
resolved a long-standing incompatibility
between the gc and gccgo toolchains
regarding embedded unexported struct types containing exported fields.
Code that walks data structures using reflection, especially to implement
serialization in the spirit
of the
encoding/json
and
encoding/xml
packages,
may need to be updated.
The problem arises when using reflection to walk through
an embedded unexported struct-typed field
into an exported field of that struct.
In this case, reflect
had incorrectly reported
the embedded field as exported, by returning an empty Field.PkgPath
.
Now it correctly reports the field as unexported
but ignores that fact when evaluating access to exported fields
contained within the struct.
Updating: Typically, code that previously walked over structs and used
f.PkgPath != ""
to exclude inaccessible fields should now use
f.PkgPath != "" && !f.Anonymous
For example, see the changes to the implementations of
encoding/json
and
encoding/xml
.
In the
sort
package,
the implementation of
Sort
has been rewritten to make about 10% fewer calls to the
Interface
's
Less
and Swap
methods, with a corresponding overall time savings.
The new algorithm does choose a different ordering than before
for values that compare equal (those pairs for which Less(i,
j)
and Less(j,
i)
are false).
Updating:
The definition of Sort
makes no guarantee about the final order of equal values,
but the new behavior may still break programs that expect a specific order.
Such programs should either refine their Less
implementations
to report the desired order
or should switch to
Stable
,
which preserves the original input order
of equal values.
In the text/template package, there are two significant new features to make writing templates easier.
First, it is now possible to trim spaces around template actions, which can make template definitions more readable. A minus sign at the beginning of an action says to trim space before the action, and a minus sign at the end of an action says to trim space after the action. For example, the template
{{"{{"}}23 -}} < {{"{{"}}- 45}}
formats as 23<45
.
Second, the new {{"{{"}}block}}
action,
combined with allowing redefinition of named templates,
provides a simple way to define pieces of a template that
can be replaced in different instantiations.
For example, the template
<title>{{"{{"}}block "title"}}Page Title{{"{{"}}end}}</title> <body> <h1>{{"{{"}}template "title"}}</h1> {{"{{"}}block "page"}}Main text{{"{{"}}end}}
defines the basic formatting of a web page. A program can then
overlay that template with new definitions for the "title"
and "page"
blocks to reuse the formatting for another page.
archive/zip
package, the
Reader
type now has a
RegisterDecompressor
method,
and the
Writer
type now has a
RegisterCompressor
method,
enabling control over compression options for individual zip files.
These take precedence over the pre-existing global
RegisterDecompressor
and
RegisterCompressor
functions.
bufio
package's
Scanner
type now has a
Buffer
method,
to specify an initial buffer and maximum buffer size to use during scanning.
This makes it possible, when needed, to scan tokens larger than
MaxScanTokenSize
.
Also for the Scanner
, the package now defines the
ErrFinalToken
error value, for use by
split functions to abort processing or to return a final empty token.
compress/flate
package
has deprecated its
ReadError
and
WriteError
error implementations.
In Go 1.5 they were only rarely returned when an error was encountered;
now they are never returned, although they remain defined for compatibility.
compress/flate
,
compress/gzip
, and
compress/zlib
packages
now report
io.ErrUnexpectedEOF
for truncated input streams, instead of
io.EOF
.
crypto/tls
package
has a variety of minor changes.
It now allows
Listen
to succeed when the
Config
has a nil Certificates
, as long as the GetCertificate
callback is set,
it adds support for RSA with AES-GCM cipher suites,
and
it adds a
RecordHeaderError
to allow clients (in particular, the net/http
package)
to report a better error when attempting a TLS connection to a non-TLS server.
crypto/x509
package
now permits certificates to contain negative serial numbers
(technically an error, but unfortunately common in practice),
and it defines a new
InsecureAlgorithmError
to give a better error message when rejecting a certificate
signed with an insecure algorithm like MD5.
debug/dwarf
and
debug/elf
packages
together add support for compressed DWARF sections.
User code needs no updating: the sections are decompressed automatically when read.
debug/elf
package
adds support for general compressed ELF sections.
User code needs no updating: the sections are decompressed automatically when read.
However, compressed
Section
's do not support random access:
they have a nil ReaderAt
field.
encoding/asn1
package
now exports
tag and class constants
useful for advanced parsing of ASN.1 structures.
encoding/asn1
package,
Unmarshal
now rejects various non-standard integer and length encodings.
encoding/json
package
now checks the syntax of a
Number
before marshaling it, requiring that it conforms to the JSON specification for numeric values.
As in previous releases, the zero Number
(an empty string) is marshaled as a literal 0 (zero).
encoding/xml
package's
Marshal
function now supports a cdata
attribute, such as chardata
but encoding its argument in one or more <![CDATA[ ... ]]>
tags.
encoding/xml
package,
Decoder
's
Token
method
now reports an error when encountering EOF before seeing all open tags closed,
consistent with its general requirement that tags in the input be properly matched.
To avoid that requirement, use
RawToken
.
fmt
package now allows
any integer type as an argument to
Printf
's *
width and precision specification.
In previous releases, the argument to *
was required to have type int
.
fmt
package,
Scanf
can now scan hexadecimal strings using %X, as an alias for %x.
Both formats accept any mix of upper- and lower-case hexadecimal.
TODO: Keep?
image
and
The image/color
packages
add
NYCbCrA
and
NYCbCrA
types, to support Y'CbCr images with non-premultiplied alpha.
io
package's
MultiWriter
implementation now implements a WriteString
method,
for use by
WriteString
.
math/big
package,
Int
adds
Append
and
Text
methods to give more control over printing.
math/big
package,
Float
now implements
encoding.TextMarshaler
and
encoding.TextUnmarshaler
,
allowing it to be serialized in a natural form by the
encoding/json
and
encoding/xml
packages.
math/big
package,
Float
's
Append
method now supports the special precision argument -1.
As in
strconv.ParseFloat
,
precision -1 means to use the smallest number of digits necessary such that
Parse
reading the result into a Float
of the same precision
will yield the original value.
math/rand
package
adds a
Read
function, and likewise
Rand
adds a
Read
method.
These make it easier to generate pseudorandom test data.
Note that, like the rest of the package,
these should not be used in cryptographic settings;
for such purposes, use the crypto/rand
package instead.
net
package's
ParseMAC
function now accepts 20-byte IP-over-InfiniBand (IPoIB) link-layer addresses.
net
package,
there have been a few changes to DNS lookups.
First, the
DNSError
error implementation now implements
Error
,
and in particular its new
IsTemporary
method returns true for DNS server errors.
Second, DNS lookup functions such as
LookupAddr
now return rooted domain names (with a trailing dot)
on Plan 9 and Windows, to match the behavior of Go on Unix systems.
TODO: Third, lookups satisfied from /etc/hosts now add a trailing dot as well,
so that looking up 127.0.0.1 typically now returns “localhost.” not “localhost”.
This is arguably a mistake but is not yet fixed. See https://golang.org/issue/13564.
net/http
package has
a number of minor additions beyond the HTTP/2 support already discussed.
First, the
FileServer
now sorts its generated directory listings by file name.
Second, the
Client
now allows user code to set the
Expect:
100-continue
header.
Third, there are
four new error codes from RFC 6585:
StatusPreconditionRequired
(428),
StatusTooManyRequests
(429),
StatusRequestHeaderFieldsTooLarge
(431),
and
StatusNetworkAuthenticationRequired
(511).
net/http
package,
there are a few change related to the handling of a
Request
data structure with its Method
field set to the empty string.
An empty Method
field has always been documented as an alias for "GET"
and it remains so.
However, Go 1.6 fixes a few routines that did not treat an empty
Method
the same as an explicit "GET"
.
Most notably, in previous releases
Client
followed redirects only with
Method
set explicitly to "GET"
;
in Go 1.6 Client
also follows redirects for the empty Method
.
Finally,
NewRequest
accepts a method
argument that has not been
documented as allowed to be empty.
In past releases, passing an empty method
argument resulted
in a Request
with an empty Method
field.
In Go 1.6, the resulting Request
always has an initialized
Method
field: if its argument is an empty string, NewRequest
sets the Method
field in the returned Request
to "GET"
.
net/http/httptest
package's
ResponseRecorder
now initializes a default Content-Type header
using the same content-sniffing algorithm as in
http.Server
.
net/url
package's
Parse
is now stricter and more spec-compliant regarding the parsing
of host names.
For example, spaces in the host name are no longer accepted.
net/url
package,
the Error
type now implements
net.Error
.
os
package's
IsExist
,
IsNotExist
,
and
IsPermission
now return correct results when inquiring about an
SyscallError
.
os/exec
package,
Cmd
's
Output
method continues to return an
ExitError
when a command exits with an unsuccessful status.
If standard error would otherwise have been discarded,
the returned ExitError
now holds a prefix
(currently 32 kB) of the failed command's standard error output,
for debugging or for inclusion in error messages.
The ExitError
's
String
method does not show the captured standard error;
programs must retrieve it from the data structure
separately.
path/filepath
package's
Join
function now correctly handles the case when the base is a relative drive path.
For example, Join(`c:`,
`a`)
now
returns `c:a`
instead of `c:\a`
as in past releases.
This may affect code that expects the incorrect result.
regexp
package,
the
Regexp
type has always been safe for use by
concurrent goroutines.
It uses a sync.Mutex
to protect
a cache of scratch spaces used during regular expression searches.
Some high-concurrency servers using the same Regexp
from many goroutines
have seen degraded performance due to contention on that mutex.
To help such servers, Regexp
now has a
Copy
method,
which makes a copy of a Regexp
that shares most of the structure
of the original but has its own scratch space cache.
Two goroutines can use different copies of a Regexp
without mutex contention.
A copy does have additional space overhead, so Copy
should only be used when contention has been observed.
strconv
package adds
IsGraphic
,
QuoteToGraphic
,
QuoteRuneToGraphic
,
AppendQuoteToGraphic
,
and
AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic
,
analogous to
IsPrint
,
QuoteToPrint
,
and so on.
The Print
family escapes all space characters except ASCII space (U+0020).
In contrast, the Graphic
family does not escape any Unicode space characters (category Zs).
testing
package,
when a test calls
t.Parallel,
that test is paused until all non-parallel tests complete, and then
that test continues execution with all other parallel tests.
Go 1.6 changes the time reported for such a test:
previously the time counted only the parallel execution,
but now it also counts the time from the start of testing
until the call to t.Parallel
.
text/template
package
contains two minor changes, in addition to the major changes
described above.
First, it adds a new
ExecError
type
returned for any error during
Execute
that does not originate in a Write
to the underlying writer.
Callers can distinguish template usage errors from I/O errors by checking for
ExecError
.
Second, the
Funcs
method
now checks that the names used as keys in the
FuncMap
are identifiers that can appear in a template function invocation.
If not, Funcs
panics.
time
package's
Parse
function has always rejected any day of month larger than 31,
such as January 32.
In Go 1.6, Parse
now also rejects February 29 in non-leap years,
February 30, February 31, April 31, June 31, September 31, and November 31.