// Copyright 2012 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. /* This file contains the code to check range loop variables bound inside function literals that are deferred or launched in new goroutines. We only check instances where the defer or go statement is the last statement in the loop body, as otherwise we would need whole program analysis. For example: for i, v := range s { go func() { println(i, v) // not what you might expect }() } See: https://golang.org/doc/go_faq.html#closures_and_goroutines */ package main import "go/ast" func init() { register("rangeloops", "check that range loop variables are used correctly", checkRangeLoop, rangeStmt) } // checkRangeLoop walks the body of the provided range statement, checking if // its index or value variables are used unsafely inside goroutines or deferred // function literals. func checkRangeLoop(f *File, node ast.Node) { n := node.(*ast.RangeStmt) key, _ := n.Key.(*ast.Ident) val, _ := n.Value.(*ast.Ident) if key == nil && val == nil { return } sl := n.Body.List if len(sl) == 0 { return } var last *ast.CallExpr switch s := sl[len(sl)-1].(type) { case *ast.GoStmt: last = s.Call case *ast.DeferStmt: last = s.Call default: return } lit, ok := last.Fun.(*ast.FuncLit) if !ok { return } ast.Inspect(lit.Body, func(n ast.Node) bool { id, ok := n.(*ast.Ident) if !ok || id.Obj == nil { return true } if f.pkg.types[id].Type == nil { // Not referring to a variable return true } if key != nil && id.Obj == key.Obj || val != nil && id.Obj == val.Obj { f.Bad(id.Pos(), "range variable", id.Name, "captured by func literal") } return true }) }