Go 1.12 is not yet released. These are work-in-progress release notes. Go 1.12 is expected to be released in February 2019.
The latest Go release, version 1.12, arrives six months after Go 1.11. Most of its changes are in TODO. 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.
There are no changes to the language specification.
Go 1.12 is the last release that is supported on FreeBSD 10.x, which has already reached end-of-life. Go 1.13 will require FreeBSD 11.2+ or FreeBSD 12.0+.
Go 1.12 is the last release that will run on macOS 10.10 Yosemite. Go 1.13 will require macOS 10.11 El Capitan or later.
TODO: status of ARM32 port?
TODO: status of AIX port?
hurd
is now a recognized value for GOOS
, reserved
for the GNU/Hurd system for use with gccgo
.
go tool vet
no longer supported
The go vet
command has been rewritten to serve as the
base for a range of different source code analysis tools. See
the golang.org/x/tools/go/analysis
package for details. A side-effect is that go tool vet
is no longer supported. External tools that use go tool
vet
must be changed to use go
vet
. Using go vet
instead of go tool
vet
should work with all supported versions of Go.
The build cache is now required as a step toward eliminating
$GOPATH/pkg
. Setting the environment variable
GOCACHE=off
to disable the
build cache
has no effect in Go 1.12.
Go 1.12 is the last release that will support binary-only packages.
When GO111MODULE
is set to on
, the go
command now supports module-aware operations outside of a module directory,
provided that those operations do not need to resolve import paths relative to
the current directory or explicitly edit the go.mod
file.
Commands such as go
get
,
go
list
, and
go
mod
download
behave as if in a
module with initially-empty requirements.
In this mode, go
env
GOMOD
reports
the system's null device (/dev/null
or NUL
).
go
commands that download and extract modules are now safe to
invoke concurrently.
The module cache (GOPATH/pkg/mod
) must reside in a filesystem that
supports file locking.
The go
directive in a go.mod
file now indicates the
version of the language used by the files within that module, and
go
mod
tidy
sets it to the
current release (go
1.12
) if no existing
version is present.
If the go
directive for a module specifies a
version newer than the toolchain in use, the go
command
will attempt to build the packages regardless, and will note the mismatch only if
that build fails.
When an import cannot be resolved using the active modules,
the go
command will now try to use the modules mentioned in the
main module's replace
directives before consulting the module
cache and the usual network sources.
If a matching replacement is found but the replace
directive does
not specify a version, the go
command uses a pseudo-version
derived from the zero time.Time
(such
as v0.0.0-00010101000000-000000000000
).
The compiler's live variable analysis has improved. This may mean that
finalizers will be executed sooner in this release than in previous
releases. If that is a problem, consider the appropriate addition of a
runtime.KeepAlive
call.
More functions are now eligible for inlining by default, including
functions that do nothing but call another function.
This extra inlining makes it additionally important to use
runtime.CallersFrames
instead of iterating over the result of
runtime.Callers
directly.
// Old code which no longer works correctly (it will miss inlined call frames). var pcs [10]uintptr n := runtime.Callers(1, pcs[:]) for _, pc := range pcs[:n] { f := runtime.FuncForPC(pc) if f != nil { fmt.Println(f.Name()) } }
// New code which will work correctly. var pcs [10]uintptr n := runtime.Callers(1, pcs[:]) frames := runtime.CallersFrames(pcs[:n]) for { frame, more := frames.Next() fmt.Println(frame.Function) if !more { break } }
The compiler now accepts a -lang
flag to set the Go language
version to use. For example, -lang=go1.8
causes the compiler to
emit an error if the program uses type aliases, which were added in Go 1.9.
Language changes made before Go 1.12 are not consistently enforced.
In Go 1.12, godoc
no longer has a command-line interface and
is only a web server. Users should use go
doc
for command-line help output instead.
All of the changes to the standard library are minor.
As always, there are various minor changes and updates to the library, made with the Go 1 promise of compatibility in mind.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/149297: make Reader.Peek invalidate Unreads
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/61511: support frame-pointer for arm64
The new function ReplaceAll
returns a copy of
a byte slice with all non-overlapping instances of a value replaced by another.
A pointer to a zero-value Reader
is now
functionally equivalent to NewReader
(nil)
.
Prior to Go 1.12, the former could not be used as a substitute for the latter in all cases.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/138675: enable race detector on arm64
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/120055: use the new getrandom syscall on FreeBSD
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/139419: warn to stderr if blocked 60+ sec on first Reader.Read call
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/130397: remove assembler implementations
Maps are now printed in key-sorted order to ease testing. The ordering rules are:
reflect.Type
describing the concrete type
and then by concrete value as described in the previous rules.
When printing maps, non-reflexive key values like NaN
were previously
displayed as <nil>
. As of this release, the correct values are printed.
To address some outstanding issues in cmd/doc
,
this package has a new Mode
bit,
PreserveAST
, which controls whether AST data is cleared.
The File
type has a new
LineStart
field,
which returns the position of the start of a given line. This is especially useful
in programs that occassionally handle non-Go files, such as assembly, but wish to use
the token.Pos
mechanism to identify file positions.
The RegisterFormat
function is now safe for concurrent use.
Paletted images with fewer than 16 colors now encode to smaller outputs.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/149578: move GODEBUGCPU options into GODEBUG
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/130676: use F_FULLFSYNC fcntl for FD.Fsync on OS X
The new StringWriter
interface wraps the
WriteString
function.
The time zone database in $GOROOT/lib/time/zoneinfo.zip
has been updated to version 2018g. Note that this ZIP file is only used if a time zone database is not provided by the operating system.
New extended precision operations Add
, Sub
, Mul
, and Div
are available in int
, int32
, and int64
versions.
The
Dialer.DualStack
setting is now ignored and deprecated;
RFC 6555 Fast Fallback ("Happy Eyeballs") is now enabled by default. To disable, set
Dialer.FallbackDelay
to a negative value.
Similarly, TCP keep-alives are now enabled by default if
Dialer.KeepAlive
is zero.
To disable, set it to a negative value.
On Linux, the splice
system call is now used when copying from a
UnixConn
to a
TCPConn
.
The HTTP server now rejects misdirected HTTP requests to HTTPS servers with a plaintext "400 Bad Request" response.
The new Client.CloseIdleConnections
method calls the Client
's underlying Transport
's CloseIdleConnections
if it has one.
The Transport
no longer rejects HTTP responses which declare
HTTP Trailers but don't use chunked encoding. Instead, the declared trailers are now just ignored.
The Transport
no longer handles MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS
values
advertised from HTTP/2 servers as strictly as it did during Go 1.10 and Go 1.11. The default behavior is now back
to how it was in Go 1.9: each connection to a server can have up to MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS
requests
active and then new TCP connections are created as needed. In Go 1.10 and Go 1.11 the http2
package
would block and wait for requests to finish instead of creating new connections.
To get the stricter behavior back, import the
golang.org/x/net/http2
package
directly and set
Transport.StrictMaxConcurrentStreams
to
true
.
The ReverseProxy
now automatically
proxies WebSocket requests.
The new ProcessState.ExitCode
method
returns the process's exit code.
ModeCharDevice
has been added to the ModeType
bitmask, allowing for
ModeDevice | ModeCharDevice
to be recovered when masking a
FileMode
with ModeType
.
The new function UserHomeDir
returns the
current user's home directory.
RemoveAll
now supports paths longer than 4096 characters
on most Unix systems.
The IsAbs
function now returns true when passed
a reserved filename on Windows such as NUL
.
List of reserved names.
A new MapIter
type is
an iterator for ranging over a map. This type is exposed through the
Value
type's new
MapRange
method.
This follows the same iteration semantics as a range statment, with Next
to advance the iterator, and Key
/Value
to access each entry.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/139783: add DeepEqual test
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/139784: add partial Deprecation comment to Copy
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/135395: use MADV_FREE on Linux if available
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/144220: add API to read module info in binary
The new function ReplaceAll
returns a copy of
a string with all non-overlapping instances of a value replaced by another.
A pointer to a zero-value Reader
is now
functionally equivalent to NewReader
(nil)
.
Prior to Go 1.12, the former could not be used as a substitute for the latter in all cases.
The new Builder.Cap
method returns the capacity of the builder's underlying byte slice.
The character mapping functions Map
,
Title
,
ToLower
,
ToLowerSpecial
,
ToTitle
,
ToTitleSpecial
,
ToUpper
, and
ToUpperSpecial
now always guarantee to return valid UTF-8. In earlier releases, if the input was invalid UTF-8 but no character replacements
needed to be applied, these routines incorrectly returned the invalid UTF-8 unmodified.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/125456: implement Unix Socket for Windows
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/138595: FreeBSD 12 ino64 support
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/141639: implement syscalls on Darwin using libSystem
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/147117: add Syscall18 on Windows
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/141644: add Wrapper interface to support external Value wrapper types
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/143137: make zero js.Value represent "undefined"
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/144384: add the Value.Truthy method
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/121936: exit with error if testing.Short is called before flag.Parse
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/139258: implement -benchtime=100x
When executing a template, long context values are no longer truncated in errors.
executing "tmpl" at <.very.deep.context.v...>: map has no entry for key "notpresent"
is now
executing "tmpl" at <.very.deep.context.value.notpresent>: map has no entry for key "notpresent"