Fix various small bugs related to delaying transformations due to type
params. Most of these relate to the need to delay a transformation when
an argument of an expression or statement has a type parameter that has
a structural constraint. The structural constraint implies the operation
should work, but the transformation can't happen until the actual value
of the type parameter is known.
- delay transformations for send statements and return statements if
any args/values have type params.
- similarly, delay transformation of a call where the function arg has
type parameters. This is mainly important for the case where the
function arg is a pure type parameter, but has a structural
constraint that requires it to be a function. Move the setting of
n.Use to transformCall(), since we may not know how many return
values there are until then, if the function arg is a type parameter.
- set the type of unary expressions from the type2 type (as we do with
most other expressions), since that works better with expressions
with type params.
- deal with these delayed transformations in subster.node() and convert
the CALL checks to a switch statement.
- make sure ir.CurFunc is set properly during stenciling, including
closures (needed for transforming return statements during
stenciling).
New test file typelist.go with tests for these cases.
Change-Id: I1b82f949d8cec47d906429209e846f4ebc8ec85e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/305729
Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
Trust: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
The test directory contains tests of the Go tool chain and runtime.
It includes black box tests, regression tests, and error output tests.
They are run as part of all.bash.
To run just these tests, execute:
../bin/go run run.go
To run just tests from specified files in this directory, execute:
../bin/go run run.go -- file1.go file2.go ...
Standard library tests should be written as regular Go tests in the appropriate package.
The tool chain and runtime also have regular Go tests in their packages.
The main reasons to add a new test to this directory are:
it is most naturally expressed using the test runner; or
it is also applicable to gccgo and other Go tool chains.