49b3ab0d81
Currently, under *most* circumstances, if there's a package loading error during "go test", that will get reported as a "FAIL p [setup failed]" or "FAIL p [build failed] message and won't prevent running unaffected test packages. However, if there's a loading error from a non-test file in a package listed directly on the "go test" command line, that gets reported as an immediate fatal error, without any "FAIL" line, and without attempting to run other tests listed on the command line. Likewise, certain early build errors (like a package containing no Go files) are currently immediately fatal rather than reporting a test failure. Fix this by eliminating the check that causes that immediate failure. This causes one minor follow-up problem: since load.TestPackagesAndErrors was never passed a top-level package with an error before, it doesn't currently propagate such an error to the packages it synthesizes (even though it will propagate errors in imported packages). Fix this by copying the error from the top-level package into the synthesized test package while we're copying everything else. For #62067. Change-Id: Icd563a3d9912256b53afd998050995e5260ebe5d Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/558637 Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> LUCI-TryBot-Result: Go LUCI <golang-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> Reviewed-by: Sam Thanawalla <samthanawalla@google.com> |
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SECURITY.md |
The Go Programming Language
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