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Change-Id: Ida6ed22102a6da36739c7581aeab297fdd7bc9f8 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/561715 Reviewed-by: Carlos Amedee <carlos@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Emmanuel Odeke <emmanuel@orijtech.com> Auto-Submit: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> LUCI-TryBot-Result: Go LUCI <golang-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
300 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
300 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Go, Backwards Compatibility, and GODEBUG"
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layout: article
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---
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<!--
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This document is kept in the Go repo, not x/website,
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because it documents the full list of known GODEBUG settings,
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which are tied to a specific release.
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-->
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## Introduction {#intro}
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Go's emphasis on backwards compatibility is one of its key strengths.
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There are, however, times when we cannot maintain complete compatibility.
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If code depends on buggy (including insecure) behavior,
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then fixing the bug will break that code.
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New features can also have similar impacts:
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enabling the HTTP/2 use by the HTTP client broke programs
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connecting to servers with buggy HTTP/2 implementations.
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These kinds of changes are unavoidable and
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[permitted by the Go 1 compatibility rules](/doc/go1compat).
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Even so, Go provides a mechanism called GODEBUG to
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reduce the impact such changes have on Go developers
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using newer toolchains to compile old code.
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A GODEBUG setting is a `key=value` pair
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that controls the execution of certain parts of a Go program.
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The environment variable `GODEBUG`
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can hold a comma-separated list of these settings.
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For example, if a Go program is running in an environment that contains
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GODEBUG=http2client=0,http2server=0
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then that Go program will disable the use of HTTP/2 by default in both
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the HTTP client and the HTTP server.
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It is also possible to set the default `GODEBUG` for a given program
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(discussed below).
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When preparing any change that is permitted by Go 1 compatibility
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but may nonetheless break some existing programs,
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we first engineer the change to keep as many existing programs working as possible.
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For the remaining programs,
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we define a new GODEBUG setting that
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allows individual programs to opt back in to the old behavior.
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A GODEBUG setting may not be added if doing so is infeasible,
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but that should be extremely rare.
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GODEBUG settings added for compatibility will be maintained
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for a minimum of two years (four Go releases).
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Some, such as `http2client` and `http2server`,
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will be maintained much longer, even indefinitely.
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When possible, each GODEBUG setting has an associated
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[runtime/metrics](/pkg/runtime/metrics/) counter
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named `/godebug/non-default-behavior/<name>:events`
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that counts the number of times a particular program's
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behavior has changed based on a non-default value
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for that setting.
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For example, when `GODEBUG=http2client=0` is set,
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`/godebug/non-default-behavior/http2client:events`
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counts the number of HTTP transports that the program
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has configured without HTTP/2 support.
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## Default GODEBUG Values {#default}
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When a GODEBUG setting is not listed in the environment variable,
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its value is derived from three sources:
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the defaults for the Go toolchain used to build the program,
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amended to match the Go version listed in `go.mod`,
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and then overridden by explicit `//go:debug` lines in the program.
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The [GODEBUG History](#history) gives the exact defaults for each Go toolchain version.
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For example, Go 1.21 introduces the `panicnil` setting,
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controlling whether `panic(nil)` is allowed;
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it defaults to `panicnil=0`, making `panic(nil)` a run-time error.
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Using `panicnil=1` restores the behavior of Go 1.20 and earlier.
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When compiling a work module or workspace that declares
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an older Go version, the Go toolchain amends its defaults
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to match that older Go version as closely as possible.
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For example, when a Go 1.21 toolchain compiles a program,
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if the work module's `go.mod` or the workspace's `go.work`
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says `go` `1.20`, then the program defaults to `panicnil=1`,
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matching Go 1.20 instead of Go 1.21.
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Because this method of setting GODEBUG defaults was introduced only in Go 1.21,
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programs listing versions of Go earlier than Go 1.20 are configured to match Go 1.20,
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not the older version.
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To override these defaults, a main package's source files
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can include one or more `//go:debug` directives at the top of the file
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(preceding the `package` statement).
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Continuing the `panicnil` example, if the module or workspace is updated
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to say `go` `1.21`, the program can opt back into the old `panic(nil)`
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behavior by including this directive:
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//go:debug panicnil=1
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Starting in Go 1.21, the Go toolchain treats a `//go:debug` directive
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with an unrecognized GODEBUG setting as an invalid program.
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Programs with more than one `//go:debug` line for a given setting
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are also treated as invalid.
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(Older toolchains ignore `//go:debug` directives entirely.)
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The defaults that will be compiled into a main package
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are reported by the command:
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{{raw `
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go list -f '{{.DefaultGODEBUG}}' my/main/package
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`}}
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Only differences from the base Go toolchain defaults are reported.
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When testing a package, `//go:debug` lines in the `*_test.go`
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files are treated as directives for the test's main package.
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In any other context, `//go:debug` lines are ignored by the toolchain;
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`go` `vet` reports such lines as misplaced.
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## GODEBUG History {#history}
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This section documents the GODEBUG settings introduced and removed in each major Go release
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for compatibility reasons.
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Packages or programs may define additional settings for internal debugging purposes;
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for example,
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see the [runtime documentation](/pkg/runtime#hdr-Environment_Variables)
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and the [go command documentation](/cmd/go#hdr-Build_and_test_caching).
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### Go 1.23
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Go 1.23 changed the channels created by package time to be unbuffered
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(synchronous), which makes correct use of the [`Timer.Stop`](/pkg/time/#Timer.Stop)
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and [`Timer.Reset`](/pkg/time/#Timer.Reset) method results much easier.
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The [`asynctimerchan` setting](/pkg/time/#NewTimer) disables this change.
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There are no runtime metrics for this change,
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This setting may be removed in a future release, Go 1.27 at the earliest.
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Go 1.23 changed the mode bits reported by [`os.Lstat`](/pkg/os#Lstat) and [`os.Stat`](/pkg/os#Stat)
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for reparse points, which can be controlled with the `winsymlink` setting.
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As of Go 1.23 (`winsymlink=1`), mount points no longer have [`os.ModeSymlink`](/pkg/os#ModeSymlink)
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set, and reparse points that are not symlinks, Unix sockets, or dedup files now
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always have [`os.ModeIrregular`](/pkg/os#ModeIrregular) set. As a result of these changes,
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[`filepath.EvalSymlinks`](/pkg/path/filepath#EvalSymlinks) no longer evaluates
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mount points, which was a source of many inconsistencies and bugs.
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At previous versions (`winsymlink=0`), mount points are treated as symlinks,
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and other reparse points with non-default [`os.ModeType`](/pkg/os#ModeType) bits
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(such as [`os.ModeDir`](/pkg/os#ModeDir)) do not have the `ModeIrregular` bit set.
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Go 1.23 changed [`os.Readlink`](/pkg/os#Readlink) and [`filepath.EvalSymlinks`](/pkg/path/filepath#EvalSymlinks)
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to avoid trying to normalize volumes to drive letters, which was not always even possible.
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This behavior is controlled by the `winreadlinkvolume` setting.
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For Go 1.23, it defaults to `winreadlinkvolume=1`.
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Previous versions default to `winreadlinkvolume=0`.
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### Go 1.22
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Go 1.22 adds a configurable limit to control the maximum acceptable RSA key size
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that can be used in TLS handshakes, controlled by the [`tlsmaxrsasize` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls#Conn.Handshake).
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The default is tlsmaxrsasize=8192, limiting RSA to 8192-bit keys. To avoid
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denial of service attacks, this setting and default was backported to Go
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1.19.13, Go 1.20.8, and Go 1.21.1.
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Go 1.22 made it an error for a request or response read by a net/http
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client or server to have an empty Content-Length header.
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This behavior is controlled by the `httplaxcontentlength` setting.
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Go 1.22 changed the behavior of ServeMux to accept extended
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patterns and unescape both patterns and request paths by segment.
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This behavior can be controlled by the
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[`httpmuxgo121` setting](/pkg/net/http/#ServeMux).
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Go 1.22 added the [Alias type](/pkg/go/types#Alias) to [go/types](/pkg/go/types)
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for the explicit representation of [type aliases](/ref/spec#Type_declarations).
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Whether the type checker produces `Alias` types or not is controlled by the
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[`gotypesalias` setting](/pkg/go/types#Alias).
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For Go 1.22 it defaults to `gotypesalias=0`.
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For Go 1.23, `gotypesalias=1` will become the default.
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This setting will be removed in a future release, Go 1.24 at the earliest.
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Go 1.22 changed the default minimum TLS version supported by both servers
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and clients to TLS 1.2. The default can be reverted to TLS 1.0 using the
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[`tls10server` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config).
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Go 1.22 changed the default TLS cipher suites used by clients and servers when
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not explicitly configured, removing the cipher suites which used RSA based key
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exchange. The default can be reverted using the [`tlsrsakex` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config).
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Go 1.22 disabled
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[`ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial`](/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial)
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when the connection supports neither TLS 1.3 nor Extended Master Secret
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(implemented in Go 1.21). It can be reenabled with the [`tlsunsafeekm`
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setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial).
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Go 1.22 changed how the runtime interacts with transparent huge pages on Linux.
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In particular, a common default Linux kernel configuration can result in
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significant memory overheads, and Go 1.22 no longer works around this default.
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To work around this issue without adjusting kernel settings, transparent huge
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pages can be disabled for Go memory with the
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[`disablethp` setting](/pkg/runtime#hdr-Environment_Variable).
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This behavior was backported to Go 1.21.1, but the setting is only available
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starting with Go 1.21.6.
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This setting may be removed in a future release, and users impacted by this issue
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should adjust their Linux configuration according to the recommendations in the
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[GC guide](/doc/gc-guide#Linux_transparent_huge_pages), or switch to a Linux
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distribution that disables transparent huge pages altogether.
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Go 1.22 added contention on runtime-internal locks to the [`mutex`
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profile](/pkg/runtime/pprof#Profile). Contention on these locks is always
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reported at `runtime._LostContendedRuntimeLock`. Complete stack traces of
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runtime locks can be enabled with the [`runtimecontentionstacks`
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setting](/pkg/runtime#hdr-Environment_Variable). These stack traces have
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non-standard semantics, see setting documentation for details.
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Go 1.22 added a new [`crypto/x509.Certificate`](/pkg/crypto/x509/#Certificate)
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field, [`Policies`](/pkg/crypto/x509/#Certificate.Policies), which supports
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certificate policy OIDs with components larger than 31 bits. By default this
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field is only used during parsing, when it is populated with policy OIDs, but
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not used during marshaling. It can be used to marshal these larger OIDs, instead
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of the existing PolicyIdentifiers field, by using the
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[`x509usepolicies` setting.](/pkg/crypto/x509/#CreateCertificate).
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### Go 1.21
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Go 1.21 made it a run-time error to call `panic` with a nil interface value,
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controlled by the [`panicnil` setting](/pkg/builtin/#panic).
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Go 1.21 made it an error for html/template actions to appear inside of an ECMAScript 6
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template literal, controlled by the
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[`jstmpllitinterp` setting](/pkg/html/template#hdr-Security_Model).
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This behavior was backported to Go 1.19.8+ and Go 1.20.3+.
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Go 1.21 introduced a limit on the maximum number of MIME headers and multipart
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forms, controlled by the
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[`multipartmaxheaders` and `multipartmaxparts` settings](/pkg/mime/multipart#hdr-Limits)
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respectively.
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This behavior was backported to Go 1.19.8+ and Go 1.20.3+.
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Go 1.21 adds the support of Multipath TCP but it is only used if the application
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explicitly asked for it. This behavior can be controlled by the
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[`multipathtcp` setting](/pkg/net#Dialer.SetMultipathTCP).
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There is no plan to remove any of these settings.
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### Go 1.20
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Go 1.20 introduced support for rejecting insecure paths in tar and zip archives,
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controlled by the [`tarinsecurepath` setting](/pkg/archive/tar/#Reader.Next)
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and the [`zipinsecurepath` setting](/pkg/archive/zip/#NewReader).
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These default to `tarinsecurepath=1` and `zipinsecurepath=1`,
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preserving the behavior of earlier versions of Go.
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A future version of Go may change the defaults to
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`tarinsecurepath=0` and `zipinsecurepath=0`.
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Go 1.20 introduced automatic seeding of the
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[`math/rand`](/pkg/math/rand) global random number generator,
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controlled by the [`randautoseed` setting](/pkg/math/rand/#Seed).
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Go 1.20 introduced the concept of fallback roots for use during certificate verification,
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controlled by the [`x509usefallbackroots` setting](/pkg/crypto/x509/#SetFallbackRoots).
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Go 1.20 removed the preinstalled `.a` files for the standard library
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from the Go distribution.
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Installations now build and cache the standard library like
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packages in other modules.
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The [`installgoroot` setting](/cmd/go#hdr-Compile_and_install_packages_and_dependencies)
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restores the installation and use of preinstalled `.a` files.
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There is no plan to remove any of these settings.
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### Go 1.19
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Go 1.19 made it an error for path lookups to resolve to binaries in the current directory,
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controlled by the [`execerrdot` setting](/pkg/os/exec#hdr-Executables_in_the_current_directory).
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There is no plan to remove this setting.
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### Go 1.18
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Go 1.18 removed support for SHA1 in most X.509 certificates,
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controlled by the [`x509sha1` setting](/pkg/crypto/x509#InsecureAlgorithmError).
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This setting will be removed in a future release, Go 1.22 at the earliest.
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### Go 1.10
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Go 1.10 changed how build caching worked and added test caching, along
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with the [`gocacheverify`, `gocachehash`, and `gocachetest` settings](/cmd/go/#hdr-Build_and_test_caching).
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There is no plan to remove these settings.
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### Go 1.6
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Go 1.6 introduced transparent support for HTTP/2,
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controlled by the [`http2client`, `http2server`, and `http2debug` settings](/pkg/net/http/#hdr-HTTP_2).
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There is no plan to remove these settings.
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### Go 1.5
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Go 1.5 introduced a pure Go DNS resolver,
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controlled by the [`netdns` setting](/pkg/net/#hdr-Name_Resolution).
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There is no plan to remove this setting.
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