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go/test/live.go
Russ Cox 7a7c0ffb47 cmd/gc: correct liveness for fat variables
The VARDEF placement must be before the initialization
but after any final use. If you have something like s = ... using s ...
the rhs must be evaluated, then the VARDEF, then the lhs
assigned.

There is a large comment in pgen.c on gvardef explaining
this in more detail.

This CL also includes Ian's suggestions from earlier CLs,
namely commenting the use of mode in link.h and fixing
the precedence of the ~r check in dcl.c.

This CL enables the check that if liveness analysis decides
a variable is live on entry to the function, that variable must
be a function parameter (not a result, and not a local variable).
If this check fails, it indicates a bug in the liveness analysis or
in the generated code being analyzed.

The race detector generates invalid code for append(x, y...).
The code declares a temporary t and then uses cap(t) before
initializing t. The new liveness check catches this bug and
stops the compiler from writing out the buggy code.
Consequently, this CL disables the race detector tests in
run.bash until the race detector bug can be fixed
(golang.org/issue/7334).

Except for the race detector bug, the liveness analysis check
does not detect any problems (this CL and the previous CLs
fixed all the detected problems).

The net test still fails with GOGC=0 but the rest of the tests
now pass or time out (because GOGC=0 is so slow).

TBR=iant
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/64170043
2014-02-15 10:58:55 -05:00

197 lines
4.4 KiB
Go

// errorcheck -0 -l -live
// Copyright 2014 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.
package main
func f1() {
var x *int
print(&x) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: x$"
print(&x) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: x$"
}
func f2(b bool) {
if b {
print(0) // nothing live here
return
}
var x *int
print(&x) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: x$"
print(&x) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: x$"
}
func f3(b bool) {
print(0)
if b == false {
print(0) // nothing live here
return
}
if b {
var x *int
print(&x) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: x$"
print(&x) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: x$"
} else {
var y *int
print(&y) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: y$"
print(&y) // ERROR "live at call to printpointer: y$"
}
print(0) // ERROR "live at call to printint: x y$"
}
// The old algorithm treated x as live on all code that
// could flow to a return statement, so it included the
// function entry and code above the declaration of x
// but would not include an indirect use of x in an infinite loop.
// Check that these cases are handled correctly.
func f4(b1, b2 bool) { // x not live here
if b2 {
print(0) // x not live here
return
}
var z **int
x := new(int)
*x = 42
z = &x
print(**z) // ERROR "live at call to printint: x z$"
if b2 {
print(1) // ERROR "live at call to printint: x$"
return
}
for {
print(**z) // ERROR "live at call to printint: x z$"
}
}
func f5(b1 bool) {
var z **int
if b1 {
x := new(int)
*x = 42
z = &x
} else {
y := new(int)
*y = 54
z = &y
}
print(**z) // ERROR "live at call to printint: x y$"
}
// confusion about the _ result used to cause spurious "live at entry to f6: _".
func f6() (_, y string) {
y = "hello"
return
}
// confusion about addressed results used to cause "live at entry to f7: x".
func f7() (x string) {
_ = &x
x = "hello"
return
}
// ignoring block returns used to cause "live at entry to f8: x, y".
func f8() (x, y string) {
return g8()
}
func g8() (string, string)
// ignoring block assignments used to cause "live at entry to f9: x"
// issue 7205
var i9 interface{}
func f9() bool {
g8()
x := i9
return x != 99
}
// liveness formerly confused by UNDEF followed by RET,
// leading to "live at entry to f10: ~r1" (unnamed result).
func f10() string {
panic(1)
}
// liveness formerly confused by select, thinking runtime.selectgo
// can return to next instruction; it always jumps elsewhere.
// note that you have to use at least two cases in the select
// to get a true select; smaller selects compile to optimized helper functions.
var c chan *int
var b bool
// this used to have a spurious "live at entry to f11a: ~r0"
func f11a() *int {
select { // ERROR "live at call to selectgo: autotmp"
case <-c: // ERROR "live at call to selectrecv: autotmp"
return nil
case <-c: // ERROR "live at call to selectrecv: autotmp"
return nil
}
}
func f11b() *int {
p := new(int)
if b {
// At this point p is dead: the code here cannot
// get to the bottom of the function.
// This used to have a spurious "live at call to printint: p".
print(1) // nothing live here!
select { // ERROR "live at call to selectgo: autotmp"
case <-c: // ERROR "live at call to selectrecv: autotmp"
return nil
case <-c: // ERROR "live at call to selectrecv: autotmp"
return nil
}
}
println(*p)
return nil
}
func f11c() *int {
p := new(int)
if b {
// Unlike previous, the cases in this select fall through,
// so we can get to the println, so p is not dead.
print(1) // ERROR "live at call to printint: p"
select { // ERROR "live at call to newselect: p" "live at call to selectgo: autotmp.* p"
case <-c: // ERROR "live at call to selectrecv: autotmp.* p"
case <-c: // ERROR "live at call to selectrecv: autotmp.* p"
}
}
println(*p)
return nil
}
// similarly, select{} does not fall through.
// this used to have a spurious "live at entry to f12: ~r0".
func f12() *int {
if b {
select{}
} else {
return nil
}
}
// incorrectly placed VARDEF annotations can cause missing liveness annotations.
// this used to be missing the fact that s is live during the call to g13 (because it is
// needed for the call to h13).
func f13() {
s := "hello"
s = h13(s, g13(s)) // ERROR "live at call to g13: s"
}
func g13(string) string
func h13(string, string) string