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Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Bonventre
20f58c6075 [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9.6
Change-Id: I00cd8ac03baa5961eb2b6206a4f407b5d89bcece
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/110336
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2018-04-30 19:04:08 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
3e0aad4265 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.9.6
Change-Id: I9699b22d3a308cda685aa684b32dcde99333df46
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/110315
Reviewed-by: Filippo Valsorda <filippo@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 40685b230a012dd5a9ca471dbf21b65457c32147)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/110375
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-04-30 18:02:05 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
50f65726a9 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: permit go:cgo_import_dynamic anywhere
It's used on Solaris to import symbols from shared libraries, e.g., in
golang.org/x/sys/unix and golang.org/x/net/internal/socket.
We could use a different directive but that would require build tags
in all the places that use it.

Fixes golang/go#23939

Change-Id: I47fcf72a6d2862e304204705979c2056c2f78ec5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/94018
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 41d3d153eb)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/110077
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-04-30 16:55:49 +00:00
Josh Bleecher Snyder
93cfaa058a [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix evaluation of "" < s
Fixes #24934

Change-Id: Ifa79ab3dfe69297eeef85f7193cd5f85e5982bc5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/106655
Run-TryBot: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/108943
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-04-27 20:52:20 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
f69b0c627f [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9.5
Change-Id: If8542fb3e9064971fb0b3be8f910fbfd5061010e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103167
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:06:28 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
ad22922d03 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: add more C compiler/linker options to whitelist
Fixes #23937

Change-Id: Ie63d91355d1a724d0012d99d457d939deeeb8d3e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/102818
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103156
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:06:14 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
c1bf152756 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: permit pkg-config flags in any argument position
Fixes #23875

Change-Id: I503af71f44d11cd6b787fef100246b55735614a0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/94896
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103155
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:06:08 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
51fd3d43da [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: add options to security whitelist
Also permit passing flags to pkg-config, as we used to.

Also change the error message to refer to https://golang.org/s/invalidflag.

Fixes #23749

Change-Id: I3fbeb4c346610e6fd55e8720e720b0a40e352ab5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93836
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103135
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:06:00 +00:00
Keith Randall
f5c8db9643 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: use unsigned loads for multi-element comparisons
When loading multiple elements of an array into a single register,
make sure we treat them as unsigned.  When treated as signed, the
upper bits might all be set, causing the shift-or combo to clobber
the values higher in the register.

Fixes #23719.

Change-Id: Ic87da03e9bd0fe2c60bb214b99f846e4e9446052
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/92335
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ilya Tocar <ilya.tocar@intel.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103115
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:05:52 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
9c69ed5d09 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: update 1.9.5 release notes to include net/http/pprof
Change-Id: I7c0716711a2cadd347fdf242c792b109539f7355
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103163
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103165
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:05:42 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
954d811c77 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: update release notes for Go 1.9.5
Change-Id: Idf88d289bac9603d852a9d19eb4b764f8589f8d9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103159
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103161
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:05:32 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
e3047e744f [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.9.5
Change-Id: I8f12b188d2e13555e1d7634b9cc0319fc737cb1d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103216
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103220
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:04:30 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
703bb6a712 [release-branch.go1.9] net/http/pprof: harden handler responses
A very small number of old browsers consider content as HTML
even when it is explicitly stated in the Content-Type header
that it is not. If content served is based on user-supplied
input, then an XSS is possible. Introduce three mitigations:

+ Don't reflect user input in error strings
+ Set a Content-Disposition header when requesting a resource
  that should never be displayed in a browser window
+ Set X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff on all responses

Change-Id: I81c9d6736e0439ebd1db99cd7fb701cc56d24805
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/102318
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Filippo Valsorda <filippo@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/103164
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:04:25 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
15474dce9d [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: restrict meta imports to valid schemes
Before this change, when using -insecure, we permitted any meta import
repo root as long as it contained "://". When not using -insecure, we
restrict meta import repo roots to be valid URLs. People may depend on
that somehow, so permit meta import repo roots to be invalid URLs, but
require them to have valid schemes per RFC 3986.

Fixes #23867

Change-Id: Iac666dfc75ac321bf8639dda5b0dba7c8840922d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/94603
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/102776
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:04:12 +00:00
Keith Randall
7467b00691 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix constant folding of right shifts on s390x
Repeat previous fix on amd64 for s390x.
Sub-word right shifts should sign extend before shifting.

Update #23812

Change-Id: I2d770190c7d8a22310b0dbd9facb3fb05afa362a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/94028
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/102777
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:04:07 +00:00
Keith Randall
ce68047f96 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix constant folding of right shifts
The sub-word shifts need to sign-extend before shifting, to avoid
bringing in data from higher in the argument.

Fixes #23812

Change-Id: I0a95a0b49c48f3b40b85765bb4a9bb492be0cd73
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93716
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/102775
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-03-29 06:03:59 +00:00
Russ Cox
6732fcc06d [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9.4
Change-Id: I2ab24e37b21d4b3275ffaeab3cb27d4e8e276e1e
Reviewed-on: https://team-review.git.corp.google.com/213171
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@google.com>
2018-02-07 15:34:31 +00:00
Russ Cox
135c5a056c [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.9.4
Change-Id: Ia3e35328d50bbd08948b34e09a9e8bb4f9b07888
Reviewed-on: https://team-review.git.corp.google.com/213170
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@google.com>
2018-02-07 15:34:27 +00:00
Russ Cox
867fb18b6d [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: accept only limited compiler and linker flags in #cgo directives
Both gcc and clang accept an option -fplugin=code.so to load
a plugin from the ELF shared object file code.so.
Obviously that plugin can then do anything it wants
during the build. This is contrary to the goal of "go get"
never running untrusted code during the build.
(What happens if you choose to run the result of
the build is your responsibility.)

Disallow this behavior by only allowing a small set of
known command-line flags in #cgo CFLAGS directives
(and #cgo LDFLAGS, etc).

The new restrictions can be adjusted by the environment
variables CGO_CFLAGS_ALLOW, CGO_CFLAGS_DISALLOW,
and so on. See the documentation.

In addition to excluding cgo-defined flags, we also have to
make sure that when we pass file names on the command
line, they don't look like flags. So we now refuse to build
packages containing suspicious file names like -x.go.

A wrinkle in all this is that GNU binutils uniformly accept
@foo on the command line to mean "if the file foo exists,
then substitute its contents for @foo in the command line".
So we must also reject @x.go, flags and flag arguments
beginning with @, and so on.

Fixes #23673, CVE-2018-6574.

Change-Id: I59e7c1355155c335a5c5ae0d2cf8fa7aa313940a
Reviewed-on: https://team-review.git.corp.google.com/212507
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
2018-02-07 14:46:58 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
c03ee1985c [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.8.6
Update golang/go#23515

Change-Id: Id334d8663bf4cbb68f224d1bba4c9ad3855f8aae
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89155
Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 6c27114ced)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89176
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-23 03:34:42 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
a563954b79 [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9.3
Change-Id: I9347a78c86dcc13cd5f6f000e788934cb1bda491
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89015
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-22 21:38:28 +00:00
Stanislav Afanasev
6ac64a0692 [release-branch.go1.9] doc/contrib.html: fix outdated link
Change-Id: I6d94a14a781a2fbeb90db35ae3490ce2ac5f8ed1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/83315
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 2fb9fe48c6)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89036
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-22 21:15:00 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
f94c408f4b [release-branch.go1.9] doc: update 1.9.3 release date
Change-Id: I689ccfb8452a170629425dc97da503b28766c6f9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89035
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 7abbaddea4819515e1dad817cc1090e18f655b60)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89055
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-22 21:12:25 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
6452bf4a05 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: change anchor URLs from golang.org/dl/ to /dl/
When running locally, it will redirect properly to golang.org/dl/
(see https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/cmd/godoc/dl.go).

This is to support domains in prod other than golang.org.

Change-Id: I6d3051fcd7e06a86442324a64d781d8ad95c624f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88679
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88715
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:15 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
5380990b84 [release-branch.go1.9] net/http: update bundled http2
Updates http2 to x/net/http2 git rev 44b7c21 for

  http2: Discard data reads on HEAD requests
  https://golang.org/cl/88655

Fixes golang/go#22376

Change-Id: I931d9065d7309bc6d3f978bfe8cc6a9f940ce9e9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88676
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:14 +00:00
Keith Randall
edd3537817 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix mapassign_fast* routines for pointer keys
The signature of the mapassign_fast* routines need to distinguish
the pointerness of their key argument.  If the affected routines
suspend part way through, the object pointed to by the key might
get garbage collected because the key is typed as a uint{32,64}.

This is not a problem for mapaccess or mapdelete because the key
in those situations do not live beyond the call involved.  If the
object referenced by the key is garbage collected prematurely, the
code still works fine.  Even if that object is subsequently reallocated,
it can't be written to the map in time to affect the lookup/delete.

Fixes #22781

Change-Id: I0bbbc5e9883d5ce702faf4e655348be1191ee439
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/79018
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Martin Möhrmann <moehrmann@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88635
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:13 +00:00
Brad Fitzpatrick
0a72be280e [release-branch.go1.9] net/url: reject invalid userinfo values when parsing URLs
Fixes #23392

Change-Id: I5822b082b14d886b9c3b5ad7beebb2c01a77851b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/87038
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88535
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:12 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
e36f34fa55 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: call amd64 VDSO entry points on large stack
NOTE: This elides changes to src/runtime/sys_linux_386.s since that
requires another change (golang.org/cl/69390) which we don’t want
to backport.

If the Linux kernel was built with CONFIG_OPTIMIZE_INLINING=n and was
built with hardening options turned on, GCC will insert a stack probe
in the VDSO function that requires a full page of stack space.
The stack probe can corrupt memory if another thread is using it.
Avoid sporadic crashes by calling the VDSO on the g0 or gsignal stack.

While we're at it, align the stack as C code expects. We've been
getting away with a misaligned stack, but it's possible that the VDSO
code will change in the future to break that assumption.

Benchmarks show a 11% hit on time.Now, but it's only 6ns.

name                      old time/op  new time/op  delta
AfterFunc-12              1.66ms ± 0%  1.66ms ± 1%     ~     (p=0.905 n=9+10)
After-12                  1.90ms ± 6%  1.86ms ± 0%   -2.05%  (p=0.012 n=10+8)
Stop-12                    113µs ± 3%   115µs ± 2%   +1.60%  (p=0.017 n=9+10)
SimultaneousAfterFunc-12   145µs ± 1%   144µs ± 0%   -0.68%  (p=0.002 n=10+8)
StartStop-12              39.5µs ± 3%  40.4µs ± 5%   +2.19%  (p=0.023 n=10+10)
Reset-12                  10.2µs ± 0%  10.4µs ± 0%   +2.45%  (p=0.000 n=10+9)
Sleep-12                   190µs ± 1%   190µs ± 1%     ~     (p=0.971 n=10+10)
Ticker-12                 4.68ms ± 2%  4.64ms ± 2%   -0.83%  (p=0.043 n=9+10)
Now-12                    48.4ns ±11%  54.0ns ±11%  +11.42%  (p=0.017 n=10+10)
NowUnixNano-12            48.5ns ±13%  56.9ns ± 8%  +17.30%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
Format-12                  489ns ±11%   504ns ± 6%     ~     (p=0.289 n=10+10)
FormatNow-12               436ns ±23%   480ns ±13%  +10.25%  (p=0.026 n=9+10)
MarshalJSON-12             656ns ±14%   587ns ±24%     ~     (p=0.063 n=10+10)
MarshalText-12             647ns ± 7%   638ns ± 9%     ~     (p=0.516 n=10+10)
Parse-12                   348ns ± 8%   328ns ± 9%   -5.66%  (p=0.030 n=10+10)
ParseDuration-12           136ns ± 9%   140ns ±11%     ~     (p=0.425 n=10+10)
Hour-12                   14.8ns ± 6%  15.6ns ±11%     ~     (p=0.085 n=10+10)
Second-12                 14.0ns ± 6%  14.3ns ±12%     ~     (p=0.443 n=10+10)
Year-12                   32.4ns ±11%  33.4ns ± 6%     ~     (p=0.492 n=10+10)
Day-12                    41.5ns ± 9%  42.3ns ±12%     ~     (p=0.239 n=10+10)

Fixes #20427

Change-Id: Ia395cbb863215f4499b8e7ef95f4b99f51090911
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/76990
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88495
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:11 +00:00
Austin Clements
75c7c40d29 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: use MAP_ANON in sigstack check
MAP_ANON is the deprecated but more portable spelling of
MAP_ANONYMOUS. Use MAP_ANON to un-break the Darwin 10.10 builder.

Updates #22930.

Change-Id: Iedd6232b94390b3b2a7423c45cdcb25c1a5b3323
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88316
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:10 +00:00
Austin Clements
f4870b7758 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: restore the Go-allocated signal stack in unminit
Currently, when we minit on a thread that already has an alternate
signal stack (e.g., because the M was an extram being used for a cgo
callback, or to handle a signal on a C thread, or because the
platform's libc always allocates a signal stack like on Android), we
simply drop the Go-allocated gsignal stack on the floor.

This is a problem for Ms on the extram list because those Ms may later
be reused for a different thread that may not have its own alternate
signal stack. On tip, this manifests as a crash in sigaltstack because
we clear the gsignal stack bounds in unminit and later try to use
those cleared bounds when we re-minit that M. On 1.9 and earlier, we
didn't clear the bounds, so this manifests as running more than one
signal handler on the same signal stack, which could lead to arbitrary
memory corruption.

This CL fixes this problem by saving the Go-allocated gsignal stack in
a new field in the m struct when overwriting it with a system-provided
signal stack, and then restoring the original gsignal stack in
unminit.

This CL is designed to be easy to back-port to 1.9. It won't quite
cherry-pick cleanly, but it should be sufficient to simply ignore the
change in mexit (which didn't exist in 1.9).

Now that we always have a place to stash the original signal stack in
the m struct, there are some simplifications we can make to the signal
stack handling. We'll do those in a later CL.

Fixes #22930.

Change-Id: I55c5a6dd9d97532f131146afdef0b216e1433054
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88315
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:09 +00:00
Keith Randall
2308c9c95e [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix decomposition of 1-element arrays
The offending rule could move the load to a different block,
which is always a bad idea.

Fixes #22683

Change-Id: I973c88389b2359f734924d9f45c3fb38e166691d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/77331
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
2018-01-22 20:25:08 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
f8a22093e2 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.9.3
Change-Id: Ic7a5d3118754b34ab0652fcef889259a03baebc3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88536
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88678
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:07 +00:00
Keith Randall
a94581d021 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix large load/store offsets on 386
Pointer arithemetic is done mod 2^32 on 386, so we can just
drop the high bits of any large constant offsets.

The bounds check will make sure wraparounds are never observed.

Fixes #21655

Change-Id: I68ae5bbea9f02c73968ea2b21ca017e5ecb89223
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/82675
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88324
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:06 +00:00
kirk
f548fb287b [release-branch.go1.9] database/sql: fix transaction leak
When the user context which passed in (*DB)BeginTx is canceled or
timeout, the current implementation could cause db transaction leak
in some extreme scenario.

Goroutine 1:
        Call (*DB) BeginTx begins a transaction with a userContext.
        In (*DB)BeginTx, a new goroutine (*Tx)awaitDone
        which monitor context and rollback tx if needed will be created

Goroutine 2(awaitDone):
        block on tx.ctx.Done()

Goroutine 1:
        Execute some insert or update sqls on the database

Goroutine 1:
        Commit the transaction, (*Tx)Commit set
        the atomic variable tx.done to 1

Goroutine 3(maybe global timer):
        Cancel userContext which be passed in Tx

Goroutine 1:
        (*Tx)Commit checks tx.ctx.Done().
        Due to the context has been canceled, it will return
        context.Canceled or context.DeadlineExceeded error immediately
        and abort the real COMMIT operation of transaction

Goroutine 2:
        Release with tx.ctx.Done() signal, execute (*Tx)rollback.
        However the atomic variable tx.done is 1 currently,
        it will return ErrTxDone error immediately and
        abort the real ROLLBACK operation of transaction

Fixes #22976

Change-Id: I3bc23adf25db823861d91e33d3cca6189fb1171d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/81736
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Theophanes <kardianos@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88323
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:05 +00:00
Alberto Donizetti
0b25e97d03 [release-branch.go1.9] math/big: protect against aliasing in nat.divLarge
In nat.divLarge (having signature (z nat).divLarge(u, uIn, v nat)),
we check whether z aliases uIn or v, but aliasing is currently not
checked for the u parameter.

Unfortunately, z and u aliasing each other can in some cases cause
errors in the computation.

The q return parameter (which will hold the result's quotient), is
unconditionally initialized as

    q = z.make(m + 1)

When cap(z) ≥ m+1, z.make() will reuse z's backing array, causing q
and z to share the same backing array. If then z aliases u, setting q
during the quotient computation will then corrupt u, which at that
point already holds computation state.

To fix this, we add an alias(z, u) check at the beginning of the
function, taking care of aliasing the same way we already do for uIn
and v.

Fixes #22830

Change-Id: I3ab81120d5af6db7772a062bb1dfc011de91f7ad
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/78995
Run-TryBot: Alberto Donizetti <alb.donizetti@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88322
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:04 +00:00
Austin Clements
3618ac2ca5 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: fix gctrace STW CPU time and CPU fraction
The CPU time reported in the gctrace for STW phases is simply
work.stwprocs times the wall-clock duration of these phases. However,
work.stwprocs is set to gcprocs(), which is wrong for multiple
reasons:

1. gcprocs is intended to limit the number of Ms used for mark
   termination based on how well the garbage collector actually
   scales, but the gctrace wants to report how much CPU time is being
   stolen from the application. During STW, that's *all* of the CPU,
   regardless of how many the garbage collector can actually use.

2. gcprocs assumes it's being called during STW, so it limits its
   result to sched.nmidle+1. However, we're not calling it during STW,
   so sched.nmidle is typically quite small, even if GOMAXPROCS is
   quite large.

Fix this by setting work.stwprocs to min(ncpu, GOMAXPROCS). This also
fixes the overall GC CPU fraction, which is based on the computed CPU
times.

Fixes #22725.

Change-Id: I64b5ce87e28dbec6870aa068ce7aecdd28c058d1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/77710
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88321
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2018-01-22 20:25:02 +00:00
Keith Randall
1cca09a8ed [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix runtime.KeepAlive
KeepAlive needs to introduce a use of the spill of the
value it is keeping alive.  Without that, we don't guarantee
that the spill dominates the KeepAlive.

This bug was probably introduced with the code to move spills
down to the dominator of the restores, instead of always spilling
just after the value itself (CL 34822).

Fixes #22458.

Change-Id: I94955a21960448ffdacc4df775fe1213967b1d4c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/74210
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88318
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:25:01 +00:00
Keith Randall
5c08eef870 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: make sure not to use SP as an index register
...because that's an illegal addressing mode.

I double-checked handling of this code, and 387 is the only
place where this check is missing.

Fixes #22429

Change-Id: I2284fe729ea86251c6af2f04076ddf7a5e66367c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73551
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88317
Run-TryBot: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2018-01-22 20:24:55 +00:00
Andrew Bonventre
aae9998d41 doc: hide content blocked by GFW when served in CN
Change-Id: Ia3d0fa0517d96f0672d3c5ce7e7b7bb8bd0ce093
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/60070
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 98603e7af6)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88735
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
2018-01-20 05:07:43 +00:00
Russ Cox
5476967b1a [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.8.5
Change-Id: I9241e6acb65c337b961eed9cdeaf4c041b6326a3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73390
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73590
2017-10-25 23:37:37 +00:00
Russ Cox
2ea7d3461b [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9.2
Change-Id: Idb72e9f562887680e0b287649a4ae1325d7e3eb5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/71271
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:24:05 +00:00
Russ Cox
d93cb46280 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: use simple, more robust fastrandn
CL 36932 (speed up fastrandn) made it faster but introduced
bad interference with some properties of fastrand itself, making
fastrandn not very random in certain ways. In particular, certain
selects are demonstrably unfair.

For Go 1.10 the new faster fastrandn has induced a new fastrand,
which in turn has caused other follow-on bugs that are still being
discovered and fixed.

For Go 1.9.2, just go back to the barely slower % implementation
that we used in Go 1.8 and earlier. This should restore fairness in
select and any other problems caused by the clever fastrandn.

The test in this CL is copied from CL 62530.

Fixes #22253.

Change-Id: Ibcf948a7bce981452e05c90dbdac122043f6f813
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70991
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:24:03 +00:00
Keith Randall
78952c06c5 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix sign-extension merging rules
If we have

  y = <int16> (MOVBQSX x)
  z = <int32> (MOVWQSX y)

We used to use this rewrite rule:

(MOVWQSX x:(MOVBQSX _)) -> x

But that resulted in replacing z with a value whose type
is only int16.  Then if z is spilled and restored, it gets
zero extended instead of sign extended.

Instead use the rule

(MOVWQSX (MOVBQSX x)) -> (MOVBQSX x)

The result is has the correct type, so it can be spilled
and restored correctly.  It might mean that a few more extension
ops might not be eliminated, but that's the price for correctness.

Fixes #21963

Change-Id: I6ec82c3d2dbe43cc1fee6fb2bd6b3a72fca3af00
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/65290
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70986
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:24:00 +00:00
Keith Randall
79996e4a1d [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: avoid generating large offsets
The assembler barfs on large offsets. Make sure that all the
instructions that need to have their offsets in an int32
  1) check on any rule that computes offsets for such instructions
  2) change their aux fields so the check builder checks it.

The assembler also silently misassembled offsets between 1<<31
and 1<<32. Add a check in the assembler to barf on those as well.

Fixes #21655

Change-Id: Iebf24bf10f9f37b3ea819ceb7d588251c0f46d7d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/59630
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70981
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:57 +00:00
Michael Matloob
f36b12657c [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: in cpuProfile.addExtra, set p.lostExtra to 0 after flush
After the number of lost extra events are written to the the cpuprof log,
the number of lost extra events should be set to zero, or else, the next
time time addExtra is logged, lostExtra will be overcounted. This change
resets lostExtra after its value is written to the log.

Fixes #21836

Change-Id: I8a6ac9c61e579e7a5ca7bdb0f3463f8ae8b9f864
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/63270
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70974
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:55 +00:00
Hiroshi Ioka
dffc9319f1 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/cgo: support large unsigned macro again
The approach of https://golang.org/cl/43476 turned out incorrect.
The problem is that the sniff introduced by the CL only work for simple
expression. And when it fails it fallback to uint64, not int64, which
breaks backward compatibility.
In this CL, we use DWARF for guessing kind instead. That should be more
reliable than previous approach. And importanly, it fallbacks to int64 even
if it fails to guess kind.

Fixes #21708

Change-Id: I39a18cb2efbe4faa9becdcf53d5ac68dba180d47
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/60510
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/60810
Reviewed-by: Hiroshi Ioka <hirochachacha@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70970
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:52 +00:00
Hiroshi Ioka
33ce1682c7 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/cgo: avoid using common names for sniffing
Current code uses names like "x" and "s" which can conflict with user's
code easily. Use cryptographic names.

Fixes #21668

Change-Id: Ib6d3d6327aa5b92d95c71503d42e3a79d96c8e16
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/59710
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/59730
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Hiroshi Ioka <hirochachacha@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70849
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:49 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
f69668e1d0 [release-branch.go1.9] os: skip TestPipeThreads as flaky for 1.9
Updates #21559

Change-Id: I90fa8b4ef97c4251440270491ac4c833d76ee872
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70771
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:47 +00:00
Russ Cox
9be38a15e4 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: avoid monotonic time zero on systems with low-res timers
Otherwise low-res timers cause problems at call sites that expect to
be able to use 0 as meaning "no time set" and therefore expect that
nanotime never returns 0 itself. For example, sched.lastpoll == 0
means no last poll.

Fixes #22394.

Change-Id: Iea28acfddfff6f46bc90f041ec173e0fea591285
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73410
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73491
TryBot-Result: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:44 +00:00
Russ Cox
8bb333a9c0 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document Go 1.9.2
Change-Id: I7d63e747e798d588bdcf2b79b6ecd21fce7bbc9c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73391
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/73490
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:41 +00:00
Russ Cox
0758d2b9da [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: clean up x.exe properly in TestImportMain
More generally I'm concerned about these tests using
$GOROOT/src/cmd/go as scratch space, especially
combined wtih tg.parallel() - it's easy to believe some other
test might inadvertently also try to write x.exe about the
same time. This CL only solves the "didn't clean up x.exe"
problem and leaves for another day the "probably shouldn't
write to cmd/go at all" problem.

Fixes #22266.

Change-Id: I651534d70e2d360138e0373fb4a316081872550b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/71410
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/71530
2017-10-25 20:23:39 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
d487b15a61 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: omit ICE diagnostics after normal error messages
After we detect errors, the AST is in a precarious state and more
likely to trip useless ICE failures. Instead let the user fix any
existing errors and see if the ICE persists.  This makes Fatalf more
consistent with how panics are handled by hidePanic.

While here, also fix detection for release versions: release version
strings begin with "go" ("go1.8", "go1.9.1", etc), not "release".

Fixes #22252.

Change-Id: I1c400af62fb49dd979b96e1bf0fb295a81c8b336
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70850
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70985
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:36 +00:00
Daniel Theophanes
fd17253587 [release-branch.go1.9] database/sql: prevent race in driver by locking dc in Next
Database drivers should be called from a single goroutine to ease
driver's design. If a driver chooses to handle context
cancels internally it may do so.

The sql package violated this agreement when calling Next or
NextResultSet. It was possible for a concurrent rollback
triggered from a context cancel to call a Tx.Rollback (which
takes a driver connection lock) while a Rows.Next is in progress
(which does not tack the driver connection lock).

The current internal design of the sql package is each call takes
roughly two locks: a closemu lock which prevents an disposing of
internal resources (assigning nil or removing from lists)
and a driver connection lock that prevents calling driver code from
multiple goroutines.

Fixes #21117

Change-Id: Ie340dc752a503089c27f57ffd43e191534829360
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/65731
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/71510
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Theophanes <kardianos@gmail.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:34 +00:00
Alex Brainman
7e7cb30475 [release-branch.go1.9] internal/poll: only call SetFileCompletionNotificationModes for sockets
CL 36799 made SetFileCompletionNotificationModes to be called for
file handles. I don't think it is correct. Revert that change.

Fixes #22024
Fixes #22207

Change-Id: I26260e8a727131cffbf60958d79eca2457495554
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/69871
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70990
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:32 +00:00
Alex Brainman
f259aed082 [release-branch.go1.9] internal/poll: do not call SetFileCompletionNotificationModes if it is broken
Current code assumes that SetFileCompletionNotificationModes
is safe to call even if we know that it is not safe to use
FILE_SKIP_COMPLETION_PORT_ON_SUCCESS flag. It appears (see issue #22149),
SetFileCompletionNotificationModes crashes when we call it without
FILE_SKIP_COMPLETION_PORT_ON_SUCCESS flag.

Do not call SetFileCompletionNotificationModes in that situation.
We are allowed to do that, because SetFileCompletionNotificationModes
is just an optimisation.

Fixes #22149

Change-Id: I0ad3aff4eabd8c27739417a62c286b1819ae166a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/69870
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70989
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:29 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
39d4bb9c0f [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: correct directory used in checkNestedVCS test
This error was not used when using git because nested git is permitted.
Add test using Mercurial, so that at least we have a test, even though
the test is not run by default.

Fixes #22157
Fixes #22201

Change-Id: If521f3c09b0754e00e56fa3cd0364764a57a43ad
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/69670
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70984
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:27 +00:00
Adam Langley
bfc22319aa [release-branch.go1.9] crypto/x509: reject intermediates with unknown critical extensions.
In https://golang.org/cl/9390 I messed up and put the critical extension
test in the wrong function. Thus it only triggered for leaf certificates
and not for intermediates or roots.

In practice, this is not expected to have a security impact in the web
PKI.

Change-Id: I4f2464ef2fb71b5865389901f293062ba1327702
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/69294
Run-TryBot: Adam Langley <agl@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70983
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:24 +00:00
Jeff
a1e34abfb3 [release-branch.go1.9] net/smtp: NewClient: set tls field to true when already using a TLS connection
Change-Id: I34008f56c191df0edcaafc20d569bbc6184f89fc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68470
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70982
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:22 +00:00
Author Name
7dadd8d517 [release-branch.go1.9] net: increase expected time to dial a closed port on all Darwin ports
All current darwin architectures seem to take at least 100ms to dial a closed port,
and that was making the all.bash script fail.

Fixes #22062

Change-Id: Ib79c4b7a5db2373c95ce5d993cdcbee55cc0667f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/67350
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70988
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:19 +00:00
Keith Randall
d80889341c [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix merge rules for panic calls
Use entire inlining call stack to decide whether two panic calls
can be merged. We used to merge panic calls when only the leaf
line numbers matched, but that leads to places higher up the call
stack being merged incorrectly.

Fixes #22083

Change-Id: Ia41400a80de4b6ecf3e5089abce0c42b65e9b38a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/67632
Run-TryBot: Emmanuel Odeke <emm.odeke@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70980
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:16 +00:00
Elias Naur
87b3a27839 [release-branch.go1.9] net: bump TestDialerDualStackFDLeak timeout on iOS
On an iPhone 6 running iOS 11, the TestDialerDualStackFDLeak test
started failing with dial durations just above the limit:

FAIL: TestDialerDualStackFDLeak (0.21s)

	dial_test.go:90: got 101.154ms; want <= 95ms

Bump the timeout on iOS.

For the iOS builder.

Change-Id: Id42b471e7cf7d0c84f6e83ed04b395fa1a2d449d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/66491
Run-TryBot: Elias Naur <elias.naur@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70987
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:14 +00:00
Austin Clements
ebfcdef901 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: make runtime.GC() trigger GC even if GOGC=off
Currently, the priority of checks in (gcTrigger).test() puts the
gcpercent<0 test above gcTriggerCycle, which is used for runtime.GC().
This is an unintentional change from 1.8 and before, where
runtime.GC() triggered a GC even if GOGC=off.

Fix this by rearranging the priority so the gcTriggerCycle test
executes even if gcpercent < 0.

Fixes #22023.

Change-Id: I109328d7b643b6824eb9d79061a9e775f0149575
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/65994
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70979
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:11 +00:00
Lynn Boger
0ab99b396d [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: fix regression in PPC64.rules move zero
When a MOVDstorezero (8 bytes) is used the offset field
in the instruction must be a multiple of 4. This situation
had been corrected in the rules for other types of stores
but not for the zero case.

This also removes some of the special MOVDstorezero cases since
they can be handled by the general LowerZero case.

Updates made to the ssa test for lowering zero moves to
include cases where the target is not aligned to at least 4.

Fixes #21947

Change-Id: I7cceceb1be4898c77cd3b5e78b58dce0a7e28edd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/64970
Run-TryBot: Lynn Boger <laboger@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Carlos Eduardo Seo <cseo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70978
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:23:08 +00:00
Alex Brainman
8d4279c111 [release-branch.go1.9] internal/poll: be explicit when using runtime netpoller
internal/poll package assumes that only net sockets use runtime
netpoller on windows. We get memory corruption if other file
handles are passed into runtime poller. Make FD.Init receive
and use useNetpoller argument, so FD.Init caller is explicit
about using runtime netpoller.

Fixes #21172

Change-Id: I60e2bfedf9dda9b341eb7a3e5221035db29f5739
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/65810
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/71132
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:05 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
1ded8334f7 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile/internal/syntax: fix source buffer refilling
The previous code seems to have an off-by-1 in it somewhere, the
consequence being that we didn't properly preserve all of the old
buffer contents that we intended to.

After spending a while looking at the existing window-shifting logic,
I wasn't able to understand exactly how it was supposed to work or
where the issue was, so I rewrote it to be (at least IMO) more
obviously correct.

Fixes #21938.

Change-Id: I1ed7bbc1e1751a52ab5f7cf0411ae289586dc345
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/64830
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70977
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:03 +00:00
Cherry Zhang
ff8289f879 [release-branch.go1.9] reflect: fix pointer past-the-end in Call with zero-sized return value
If a function with nonzero frame but zero-sized return value is
Call'd, we may write a past-the-end pointer in preparing the
return Values. Fix by return the zero value for zero-sized
return value.

Fixes #21717.

Change-Id: I5351cd86d898467170a888b4c3fc9392f0e7aa3b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/60811
Run-TryBot: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70971
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:23:00 +00:00
hagen1778
bd34e74134 [release-branch.go1.9] log: fix data race on log.Output
There was unprotected access to Logger.flag in log.Output which
could lead to data race in cases when log.SetFlags called simultaneously.
For example, "hot" switching on/off debug-mode for Logger by log.SetFlags
while application still writing logs.

Fixes #21935

Change-Id: I36be25f23cad44cde62ed1af28a30d276400e1b8
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/64710
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70976
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:22:58 +00:00
David Crawshaw
0b55d8dbfc [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: replace GOROOT in //line directives
The compiler replaces any path of the form /path/to/goroot/src/net/port.go
with GOROOT/src/net/port.go so that the same object file is
produced if the GOROOT is moved. It was skipping this transformation
for any absolute path into the GOROOT that came from //line directives,
such as those generated by cmd/cgo.

Fixes #21373
Fixes #21720
Fixes #21825

Change-Id: I2784c701b4391cfb92e23efbcb091a84957d61dd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/63693
Run-TryBot: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70975
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:22:55 +00:00
zhongtao.chen
5c48811aec [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: limit the number of simultaneously opened files to avoid EMFILE/ENFILE errors
If the Go packages with enough source files,it will cause EMFILE/ENFILE error,
Fix this by limiting the number of simultaneously opened files.

Fixes #21621

Change-Id: I8555d79242d2f90771e37e073b7540fc7194a64a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57751
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/63752
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:22:53 +00:00
Bryan C. Mills
8c7fa95ad3 [release-branch.go1.9] expvar: make (*Map).Init clear existing keys
fixes #21619

Change-Id: I5bb513dfc8cac875b06a262eec40b5863ae23a4c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/62370
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70973
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:22:50 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
ccd5abc105 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: simplify "missing function body" error message
Fixes #21747.

Change-Id: I6a68370be3b7510ce364ddd1e41a1d767ce3a67f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/61311
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70972
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:22:47 +00:00
Dmitri Shuralyov
2e4358c960 [release-branch.go1.9] time: fix documentation of Round, Truncate behavior for d <= 0
Saying that they return t unchanged is misleading, because they return
a modified t, stripped of any monotonic clock reading, as of Go 1.9.

Fixes #21485.

Change-Id: Icddf8813aed3d687fcefcd2fe542829438be6a0a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/56690
Reviewed-by: Avelino <t@avelino.xxx>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70846
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-25 20:22:45 +00:00
Austin Clements
c6388d381e [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: capture runtimeInitTime after nanotime is initialized
CL 36428 changed the way nanotime works so on Darwin and Windows it
now depends on runtime.startNano, which is computed at runtime.init
time. Unfortunately, the `runtimeInitTime = nanotime()` initialization
happened *before* runtime.init, so on these platforms runtimeInitTime
is set incorrectly. The one (and only) consequence of this is that the
start time printed in gctrace lines is bogus:

gc 1 18446653480.186s 0%: 0.092+0.47+0.038 ms clock, 0.37+0.15/0.81/1.8+0.15 ms cpu, 4->4->1 MB, 5 MB goal, 8 P

To fix this, this commit moves the runtimeInitTime initialization to
shortly after runtime.init, at which point nanotime is safe to use.

This also requires changing the condition in newproc1 that currently
uses runtimeInitTime != 0 simply to detect whether or not the main M
has started. Since runtimeInitTime could genuinely be 0 now, this
introduces a separate flag to newproc1.

Fixes #21554.

Change-Id: Id874a4b912d3fa3d22f58d01b31ffb3548266d3b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/58690
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rick Hudson <rlh@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70848
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:22:42 +00:00
Martin Möhrmann
724638c9d8 [release-branch.go1.9] crypto/x509: skip TestSystemRoots
golang.org/cl/36941 enabled loading of all trusted certs on darwin
for the non-cgo execSecurityRoots.

The corresponding cgo version golang.org/cl/36942 for systemRootsPool
has not been merged yet.

This tests fails reliably on some darwin systems:
--- FAIL: TestSystemRoots (1.28s)
        root_darwin_test.go:31:     cgo sys roots: 353.552363ms
        root_darwin_test.go:32: non-cgo sys roots: 921.85297ms
        root_darwin_test.go:44: got 169 roots
        root_darwin_test.go:44: got 455 roots
        root_darwin_test.go:73: insufficient overlap between cgo and non-cgo roots; want at least 227, have 168
FAIL
FAIL    crypto/x509     2.445s

Updates #16532
Updates #21416

Change-Id: I52c2c847651fb3621fdb6ab858ebe8e28894c201
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57830
Run-TryBot: Martin Möhrmann <moehrmann@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/70847
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Martin Möhrmann <moehrmann@google.com>
2017-10-25 20:22:39 +00:00
Alex Brainman
ed3b0d63b7 [release-branch.go1.9] internal/poll: add tests for Windows file and serial ports
I also wanted to test net sockets, but I do not know how to
access their file handles. So I did not implement socket tests.

Updates #21172

Change-Id: I5062c0e65a817571d755397d60762c175f9791ce
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/53530
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/71131
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Brainman <alex.brainman@gmail.com>
2017-10-25 20:22:36 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
93322a5b3d [release-branch.go1.9] doc: add missing "Minor revisions" header for 1.9
Change-Id: Ib042e472e62f48a6afaba1762beaf102a9b99cf5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68290
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68291
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-10-04 20:22:52 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
7f40c1214d [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9.1
Change-Id: I711b38738a7f6fade42a2821908234940f3cf280
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68233
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-10-04 18:39:31 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
598433b17a [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document go1.9.1 and go1.8.4
Change-Id: Ib42fabc6829b6033373c0378713733f88e73e73d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68230
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68231
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-10-04 18:36:02 +00:00
Tom Bergan
815cad3ed0 [release-branch.go1.9] doc/1.9: add mention of net/http.LocalAddrContextKey
Fixes #21603

Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/59530
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/59670
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Tom Bergan <tombergan@google.com>

Change-Id: Ie9732d57948593dc0306a4a649664eedb3de370c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68232
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-10-04 18:35:59 +00:00
Russ Cox
1900d34a10 [release-branch.go1.9] net/smtp: fix PlainAuth to refuse to send passwords to non-TLS servers
PlainAuth originally refused to send passwords to non-TLS servers
and was documented as such.

In 2013, issue #5184 was filed objecting to the TLS requirement,
despite the fact that it is spelled out clearly in RFC 4954.
The only possibly legitimate use case raised was using PLAIN auth
for connections to localhost, and the suggested fix was to let the
server decide: if it advertises that PLAIN auth is OK, believe it.
That approach was adopted in CL 8279043 and released in Go 1.1.

Unfortunately, this is exactly wrong. The whole point of the TLS
requirement is to make sure not to send the password to the wrong
server or to a man-in-the-middle. Instead of implementing this rule,
CL 8279043 blindly trusts the server, so that if a man-in-the-middle
says "it's OK, you can send me your password," PlainAuth does.
And the documentation was not updated to reflect any of this.

This CL restores the original TLS check, as required by RFC 4954
and as promised in the documentation for PlainAuth.
It then carves out a documented exception for connections made
to localhost (defined as "localhost", "127.0.0.1", or "::1").

Cherry-pick of CL 68170.

Change-Id: I1d3729bbd33aa2f11a03f4c000e6bb473164957b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68210
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-10-04 18:19:11 +00:00
Russ Cox
a39bcecea6 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/go: reject update of VCS inside VCS
Cherry-pick of CL 68110.

Change-Id: Iae84c6404ab5eeb6950faa2364f97a017c67c506
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68022
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-10-04 18:15:57 +00:00
Russ Cox
d9e64910af [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: deflake TestPeriodicGC
It was only waiting 0.1 seconds for the two GCs it wanted.
Let it wait 1 second.

Change-Id: Ib3cdc8127cbf95694a9f173643c02529a85063af
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/68118
Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-10-04 16:47:06 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
c8aec4095e [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9
Change-Id: I0899ec0150f2a051b7572879b446a8548f742ae0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/58731
Run-TryBot: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-08-24 20:52:14 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
b8c9ef9f09 [release-branch.go1.9] doc: add go1.9 to golang.org/project
Pre-emptive. Go 1.9 is expected to be released in August.

Change-Id: I0f58c012c4110bf490022dc2c1d69c0988d73bfa
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/52351
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/58730
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-08-24 19:57:08 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
136f4a6b2a [release-branch.go1.9] doc: document go1.9
Change-Id: I97075f24319a4b96cbeb9e3ff2e7b2056ff59e32
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/58651
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/58710
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-08-24 19:55:44 +00:00
Ryuji IWATA
867be4c60c [release-branch.go1.9] doc/go1.9: fix typo in Moved GOROOT
Change-Id: I71bfff6a3462e6dfd7a65ef76ec56644bae37c34
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57272
Reviewed-by: Avelino <t@avelino.xxx>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/58650
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2017-08-24 19:54:21 +00:00
Josh Bleecher Snyder
9a4e7942ea [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: remove gc.Sysfunc calls from 387 backend
[This is a cherry-pick of CL 54090 to the 1.9 release branch.]

gc.Sysfunc must not be called concurrently.
We set up runtime routines used by the backend
prior to doing any backend compilation.
I missed the 387 ones; fix that.

Sysfunc should have been unexported during 1.9.
I will rectify that in a subsequent CL.

Fixes #21352

Change-Id: I485bb1867b46d8e5cf64bc820b8963576dc16174
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/55970
Run-TryBot: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2017-08-22 18:24:54 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
ff38035a62 [release-branch.go1.9] doc/go1.9: fix typo in crypto/x509 of "Minor changes to the library".
Backport of https://golang.org/cl/57390 to 1.9 release branch.

Change-Id: Ieea5a048732db7ee5dc5cf13f06e11ca4f5313cc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57450
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2017-08-22 18:21:23 +00:00
Austin Clements
42046e8989 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: fix false positive race in profile label reading
Because profile labels are copied from the goroutine into the tag
buffer by the signal handler, there's a carefully-crafted set of race
detector annotations to create the necessary happens-before edges
between setting a goroutine's profile label and retrieving it from the
profile tag buffer.

Given the constraints of the signal handler, we have to approximate
the true synchronization behavior. Currently, that approximation is
too weak.

Ideally, runtime_setProfLabel would perform a store-release on
&getg().labels and copying each label into the profile would perform a
load-acquire on &getg().labels. This would create the necessary
happens-before edges through each individual g.labels object.

Since we can't do this in the signal handler, we instead synchronize
on a "labelSync" global. The problem occurs with the following
sequence:

1. Goroutine 1 calls setProfLabel, which does a store-release on
   labelSync.

2. Goroutine 2 calls setProfLabel, which does a store-release on
   labelSync.

3. Goroutine 3 reads the profile, which does a load-acquire on
   labelSync.

The problem is that the load-acquire only synchronizes with the *most
recent* store-release to labelSync, and the two store-releases don't
synchronize with each other. So, once goroutine 3 touches the label
set by goroutine 1, we report a race.

The solution is to use racereleasemerge. This is like a
read-modify-write, rather than just a store-release. Each RMW of
labelSync in runtime_setProfLabel synchronizes with the previous RMW
of labelSync, and this ultimately carries forward to the load-acquire,
so it synchronizes with *all* setProfLabel operations, not just the
most recent.

Change-Id: Iab58329b156122002fff12cfe64fbeacb31c9613
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57190
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-08-18 23:07:14 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
fbf7e1f295 [release-branch.go1.9] testing: don't fail all tests after racy test failure
The code was adding race.Errors to t.raceErrors before checking
Failed, but Failed was using t.raceErrors+race.Errors. We don't want
to change Failed, since that would affect tests themselves, so modify
the harness to not unnecessarily change t.raceErrors.

Updates #19851
Fixes #21338

Change-Id: I483f27c68c340928f1cbdef160abc0a5716efb5d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57151
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2017-08-18 21:10:46 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
21312a4b5e [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/dist: update deps.go for current dependencies
Fixes #21456

Change-Id: I7841d816e8c1c581e61db4f24124f99f5184fead
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57170
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2017-08-18 21:10:29 +00:00
Cherry Zhang
5927854f7d [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: add rules handling unsigned div/mod by constant 1<<63
Cherry-pick CL 56890.

Normally 64-bit div/mod is turned into runtime calls on 32-bit
arch, but the front end leaves power-of-two constant division
and hopes the SSA backend turns into a shift or AND. The SSA rule is

(Mod64u <t> n (Const64 [c])) && isPowerOfTwo(c) -> (And64 n (Const64 <t> [c-1]))

But isPowerOfTwo returns true only for positive int64, which leaves
out 1<<63 unhandled. Add a special case for 1<<63.

Fixes #21517.

Change-Id: Ic91f86fd5e035a8bb64b937c15cb1c38fec917d6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/57070
Run-TryBot: Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-08-18 18:43:00 +00:00
pvoicu
65717b2dca [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: fix usleep by correctly setting nanoseconds parameter for pselect6
Fixes #21518

Change-Id: Idd67e3f0410d0ce991b34dcc0c8f15e0d5c529c9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/56891
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Petrica Voicu <pvoicu@paypal.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
2017-08-18 14:14:39 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
048c9cfaac [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9rc2
Change-Id: If95cec0ec7e32cdb450818c4c55e2d03b847ab65
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/53630
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2017-08-07 20:29:01 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
cff0de3da3 [release-branch.go1.9] all: merge master into release-branch.go1.9
579120323f runtime: mapassign_* should use typedmemmove to update keys
380525598c all: remove some manual hyphenation
f096b5b340 runtime: mark activeModules nosplit/nowritebarrier
3e3da54633 math/bits: fix example for OnesCount64
9b1e7cf2ac math/bits: add examples for OnesCount functions
b01db023b1 misc/cgo/testsanitizers: also skip tsan11/tsan12 when using GCC
a279b53a18 reflect: document how DeepEqual handles cycles
909f409a8d doc: mention handling of moved GOROOT in 1.9 release notes
58ad0176ca doc: use better wording to explain type-aware completion
92dac21d29 doc: replace paid with commercial
9bb98e02de doc/1.9: add CL 43712, ReverseProxy of HTTP/2 trailers to the release notes.
78d74fc2cd doc: clarify that Gogland is for paid IntelliJ platform IDEs
5495047223 doc/1.9: fix broken html link in CL 53030/53210
890e0e862f doc: fix bad link in go1.9 release notes
be596f049a doc/1.9: fix stray html in CL 53030
0173631d53 encoding/binary: add examples for varint functions
ac0ccf3cd2 doc/1.9: add CL 36696 for crypto/x509 to the release notes
cc402c2c4d doc: hide blog content for golang.google.cn
f396fa4285 internal/poll: don't add non-sockets to runtime poller
664cd26c89 cmd/vet: don't exit with failure on type checking error
a8730cd93a doc: hide video and share if being served from CN
b63db76c4a testsanitizers: check that tsan program runs, skip tsan10 on gcc
193eda7291 time: skip ZoneAbbr test in timezones with no abbreviation
6f08c935a9 cmd/go: show examples with empty output in go test -list
f20944de78 cmd/compile: set/unset base register for better assembly print
623e2c4603 runtime: map bitmap and spans during heap initialization
780249eed4 runtime: fall back to small mmaps if we fail to grow reservation
31b2c4cc25 .github: add .md extension to SUPPORT file
ac29f30dbb plugin: mention that there are known bugs with plugins
45a4609c0a cmd/dist: skip moved GOROOT on Go's Windows builders when not sharding tests
e157fac02d test: add README
835dfef939 runtime/pprof: prevent a deadlock that SIGPROF might create on mips{,le}
df91b8044d doc: list editor options by name, not plugin name
3d9475c04b doc: cleanup editor page
b9661a14ea doc: add Atom to editor guide
ee392ac10c cmd/compile: consider exported flag in namedata

Change-Id: I3a48493e8c05d97cb3b61635503ef0ccd646e5cb
2017-08-07 10:28:35 -07:00
Austin Clements
196492a299 [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: map bitmap and spans during heap initialization
We lazily map the bitmap and spans areas as the heap grows. However,
right now we're very slightly too lazy. Specifically, the following
can happen on 32-bit:

1. mallocinit fails to allocate any heap arena, so
   arena_used == arena_alloc == arena_end == bitmap.

2. There's less than 256MB between the end of the bitmap mapping and
   the next mapping.

3. On the first allocation, mheap.sysAlloc sees that there's not
   enough room in [arena_alloc, arena_end) because there's no room at
   all. It gets a 256MB mapping from somewhere *lower* in the address
   space than arena_used and sets arena_alloc and arena_end to this
   hole.

4. Since the new arena_alloc is lower than arena_used, mheap.sysAlloc
   doesn't bother to call mheap.setArenaUsed, so we still don't have a
   bitmap mapping or a spans array mapping.

5. mheap.grow, which called mheap.sysAlloc, attempts to fill in the
   spans array and crashes.

Fix this by mapping the metadata regions for the initial arena_used
when the heap is initialized, rather than trying to wait for an
allocation. This maintains the intended invariant that the structures
are always mapped for [arena_start, arena_used).

Fixes #21044.

Cherry-pick of CL 51714. Fixes #21234.

Change-Id: I4422375a6e234b9f979d22135fc63ae3395946b0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/52191
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-07-31 17:46:03 +00:00
Austin Clements
1a6d87d4bf [release-branch.go1.9] runtime: fall back to small mmaps if we fail to grow reservation
Right now, if it's possible to grow the arena reservation but
mheap.sysAlloc fails to get 256MB more of memory, it simply fails.
However, on 32-bit we have a fallback path that uses much smaller
mmaps that could take in this situation, but fail to.

This commit fixes mheap.sysAlloc to use a common failure path in case
it can't grow the reservation. On 32-bit, this path includes the
fallback.

Ideally, mheap.sysAlloc would attempt smaller reservation growths
first, but taking the fallback path is a simple change for Go 1.9.

Updates #21044 (fixes one of two issues).

Cherry-pick of CL 51713. Updates #21234.

Change-Id: I1e0035ffba986c3551479d5742809e43da5e7c73
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/52190
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2017-07-31 17:45:59 +00:00
Brad Fitzpatrick
7320506bc5 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/dist: skip moved GOROOT on Go's Windows builders when not sharding tests
Change-Id: I0bcae339624e7d61037d9ea0885b7bd07491bbb6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/51430
Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
(cherry picked from commit 4833e920c1d7f6b23458e6ff3c73951fcf754219)
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/51450
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2017-07-27 05:56:03 +00:00
Chris Broadfoot
65c6c88a94 [release-branch.go1.9] go1.9rc1
Change-Id: I6251fc128990f9494a0b037cabb24ada5eabb6b5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/50951
Run-TryBot: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-07-24 19:35:04 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
fbc9b49790 [release-branch.go1.9] cmd/compile: consider exported flag in namedata
It is possible to have an unexported name with a nil package,
for an embedded field whose type is a pointer to an unexported type.
We must encode that fact in the type..namedata symbol name,
to avoid incorrectly merging an unexported name with an exported name.

Fixes #21120

Change-Id: I2e3879d77fa15c05ad92e0bf8e55f74082db5111
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/50710
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/50970
Reviewed-by: Chris Broadfoot <cbro@golang.org>
2017-07-24 18:12:06 +00:00
9407 changed files with 592686 additions and 1377302 deletions

14
.gitattributes vendored
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@@ -1,16 +1,10 @@
# Treat all files in the Go repo as binary, with no git magic updating
# line endings. This produces predictable results in different environments.
#
# Windows users contributing to Go will need to use a modern version
# of git and editors capable of LF line endings.
#
# Windows .bat files are known to have multiple bugs when run with LF
# endings, and so they are checked in with CRLF endings, with a test
# in test/winbatch.go to catch problems. (See golang.org/issue/37791.)
# line endings. Windows users contributing to Go will need to use a
# modern version of git and editors capable of LF line endings.
#
# We'll prevent accidental CRLF line endings from entering the repo
# via the git-codereview gofmt checks and tests.
# via the git-review gofmt checks.
#
# See golang.org/issue/9281.
# See golang.org/issue/9281
* -text

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
# Code of Conduct
Please read the [Go Community Code of Conduct](https://golang.org/conduct).

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@@ -1,38 +1,21 @@
<!--
Please answer these questions before submitting your issue. Thanks!
For questions please use one of our forums: https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Questions
-->
### What version of Go are you using (`go version`)?
<pre>
$ go version
</pre>
### Does this issue reproduce with the latest release?
### What operating system and processor architecture are you using (`go env`)?
<details><summary><code>go env</code> Output</summary><br><pre>
$ go env
</pre></details>
### What did you do?
<!--
If possible, provide a recipe for reproducing the error.
A complete runnable program is good.
A link on play.golang.org is best.
-->
### What did you expect to see?
### What did you see instead?

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@@ -1,25 +1,7 @@
This PR will be imported into Gerrit with the title and first
comment (this text) used to generate the subject and body of
the Gerrit change.
Please do not send pull requests to the golang/* repositories.
**Please ensure you adhere to every item in this list.**
We do, however, take contributions gladly.
More info can be found at https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CommitMessage
See https://golang.org/doc/contribute.html
+ The PR title is formatted as follows: `net/http: frob the quux before blarfing`
+ The package name goes before the colon
+ The part after the colon uses the verb tense + phrase that completes the blank in,
"This change modifies Go to ___________"
+ Lowercase verb after the colon
+ No trailing period
+ Keep the title as short as possible. ideally under 76 characters or shorter
+ No Markdown
+ The first PR comment (this one) is wrapped at 76 characters, unless it's
really needed (ASCII art, table, or long link)
+ If there is a corresponding issue, add either `Fixes #1234` or `Updates #1234`
(the latter if this is not a complete fix) to this comment
+ If referring to a repo other than `golang/go` you can use the
`owner/repo#issue_number` syntax: `Fixes golang/tools#1234`
+ We do not use Signed-off-by lines in Go. Please don't add them.
Our Gerrit server & GitHub bots enforce CLA compliance instead.
+ Delete these instructions once you have read and applied them
Thanks!

2
.github/SUPPORT.md vendored
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@@ -9,6 +9,6 @@ For asking questions, see:
* [Gophers Slack](https://gophers.slack.com), use the [invite app](https://invite.slack.golangbridge.org/) for access
* [Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/go) with questions tagged "go"
* [Stack Overflow](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/go) with questions tagged "go"
* **IRC** channel #go-nuts on Freenode

7
.gitignore vendored
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@@ -31,13 +31,11 @@ _testmain.go
/pkg/
/src/*.*/
/src/cmd/cgo/zdefaultcc.go
/src/cmd/dist/dist
/src/cmd/go/internal/cfg/zdefaultcc.go
/src/cmd/go/internal/cfg/zosarch.go
/src/cmd/internal/objabi/zbootstrap.go
/src/go/build/zcgo.go
/src/go/doc/headscan
/src/internal/buildcfg/zbootstrap.go
/src/runtime/internal/sys/zversion.go
/src/unicode/maketables
/test.out
@@ -45,8 +43,3 @@ _testmain.go
/test/pass.out
/test/run.out
/test/times.out
# This file includes artifacts of Go build that should not be checked in.
# For files created by specific development environment (e.g. editor),
# use alternative ways to exclude files from git.
# For example, set up .git/info/exclude or use a global .gitignore.

397
AUTHORS

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

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@@ -30,6 +30,11 @@ For change proposals, see [Proposing Changes To Go](https://github.com/golang/pr
Please read the [Contribution Guidelines](https://golang.org/doc/contribute.html) before sending patches.
**We do not accept GitHub pull requests**
(we use [an instance](https://go-review.googlesource.com/) of the
[Gerrit](https://www.gerritcodereview.com/) code review system instead).
Also, please do not post patches on the issue tracker.
Unless otherwise noted, the Go source files are distributed under
the BSD-style license found in the LICENSE file.

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

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@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
Go is an open source programming language that makes it easy to build simple,
reliable, and efficient software.
![Gopher image](https://golang.org/doc/gopher/fiveyears.jpg)
![Gopher image](doc/gopher/fiveyears.jpg)
*Gopher image by [Renee French][rf], licensed under [Creative Commons 3.0 Attributions license][cc3-by].*
Our canonical Git repository is located at https://go.googlesource.com/go.
@@ -19,24 +19,27 @@ BSD-style license found in the LICENSE file.
Official binary distributions are available at https://golang.org/dl/.
After downloading a binary release, visit https://golang.org/doc/install
for installation instructions.
or load doc/install.html in your web browser for installation
instructions.
#### Install From Source
If a binary distribution is not available for your combination of
operating system and architecture, visit
https://golang.org/doc/install/source
for source installation instructions.
https://golang.org/doc/install/source or load doc/install-source.html
in your web browser for source installation instructions.
### Contributing
Go is the work of thousands of contributors. We appreciate your help!
Go is the work of hundreds of contributors. We appreciate your help!
To contribute, please read the contribution guidelines at https://golang.org/doc/contribute.html.
To contribute, please read the contribution guidelines:
https://golang.org/doc/contribute.html
Note that the Go project uses the issue tracker for bug reports and
proposals only. See https://golang.org/wiki/Questions for a list of
places to ask questions about the Go language.
Note that the Go project does not use GitHub pull requests, and that
we use the issue tracker for bug reports and proposals only. See
https://golang.org/wiki/Questions for a list of places to ask
questions about the Go language.
[rf]: https://reneefrench.blogspot.com/
[cc3-by]: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

View File

@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
# Security Policy
## Supported Versions
We support the past two Go releases (for example, Go 1.12.x and Go 1.13.x).
See https://golang.org/wiki/Go-Release-Cycle and in particular the
[Release Maintenance](https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Go-Release-Cycle#release-maintenance)
part of that page.
## Reporting a Vulnerability
See https://golang.org/security for how to report a vulnerability.

1
VERSION Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
go1.9.6

View File

@@ -11,3 +11,4 @@ compatibility.
next.txt is the only file intended to be mutated. It's a list of
features that may be added to the next version. It only affects
warning output from the go api tool.

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@@ -1,60 +1,12 @@
pkg encoding/json, method (*RawMessage) MarshalJSON() ([]uint8, error)
pkg math, const MaxFloat64 = 1.79769e+308 // 179769313486231570814527423731704356798100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
pkg math, const SmallestNonzeroFloat32 = 1.4013e-45 // 17516230804060213386546619791123951641/12500000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
pkg math, const SmallestNonzeroFloat64 = 4.94066e-324 // 4940656458412465441765687928682213723651/1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
pkg math/big, const MaxBase = 36
pkg math/big, type Word uintptr
pkg net, func ListenUnixgram(string, *UnixAddr) (*UDPConn, error)
pkg os (linux-arm), const O_SYNC = 1052672
pkg os (linux-arm), const O_SYNC = 4096
pkg os (linux-arm-cgo), const O_SYNC = 1052672
pkg os (linux-arm-cgo), const O_SYNC = 4096
pkg os, const ModeAppend FileMode
pkg os, const ModeCharDevice FileMode
pkg os, const ModeDevice FileMode
pkg os, const ModeDir FileMode
pkg os, const ModeExclusive FileMode
pkg os, const ModeIrregular FileMode
pkg os, const ModeNamedPipe FileMode
pkg os, const ModePerm FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSetgid FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSetuid FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSocket FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSticky FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSymlink FileMode
pkg os, const ModeTemporary FileMode
pkg os, const ModeType = 2399141888
pkg os, const ModeType = 2399666176
pkg os, const ModeType FileMode
pkg os, func Chmod(string, FileMode) error
pkg os, func Lstat(string) (FileInfo, error)
pkg os, func Mkdir(string, FileMode) error
pkg os, func MkdirAll(string, FileMode) error
pkg os, func OpenFile(string, int, FileMode) (*File, error)
pkg os, func SameFile(FileInfo, FileInfo) bool
pkg os, func Stat(string) (FileInfo, error)
pkg os, method (*File) Chmod(FileMode) error
pkg os, method (*File) Readdir(int) ([]FileInfo, error)
pkg os, method (*File) Stat() (FileInfo, error)
pkg os, method (*PathError) Error() string
pkg os, method (*PathError) Timeout() bool
pkg os, method (*PathError) Unwrap() error
pkg os, method (FileMode) IsDir() bool
pkg os, method (FileMode) IsRegular() bool
pkg os, method (FileMode) Perm() FileMode
pkg os, method (FileMode) String() string
pkg os, type FileInfo interface { IsDir, ModTime, Mode, Name, Size, Sys }
pkg os, type FileInfo interface, IsDir() bool
pkg os, type FileInfo interface, ModTime() time.Time
pkg os, type FileInfo interface, Mode() FileMode
pkg os, type FileInfo interface, Name() string
pkg os, type FileInfo interface, Size() int64
pkg os, type FileInfo interface, Sys() interface{}
pkg os, type FileMode uint32
pkg os, type PathError struct
pkg os, type PathError struct, Err error
pkg os, type PathError struct, Op string
pkg os, type PathError struct, Path string
pkg syscall (darwin-386), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (darwin-386), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (darwin-386-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (darwin-386-cgo), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (darwin-amd64), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (darwin-amd64), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (darwin-amd64-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
@@ -62,80 +14,25 @@ pkg syscall (darwin-amd64-cgo), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const AF_MAX = 38
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const DLT_MATCHING_MAX = 242
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const ELAST = 94
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const O_CLOEXEC = 0
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), func Mknod(string, uint32, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Blksize uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Lspare int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Pad_cgo_0 [8]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const AF_MAX = 38
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const DLT_MATCHING_MAX = 242
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const ELAST = 94
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const O_CLOEXEC = 0
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), func Mknod(string, uint32, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Blksize uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Lspare int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Pad_cgo_0 [8]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const AF_MAX = 38
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const DLT_MATCHING_MAX = 242
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const ELAST = 94
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const O_CLOEXEC = 0
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), func Mknod(string, uint32, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Blksize uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Lspare int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const AF_MAX = 38
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const DLT_MATCHING_MAX = 242
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const ELAST = 94
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const O_CLOEXEC = 0
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), func Mknod(string, uint32, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Blksize uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Lspare int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const AF_MAX = 38
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const BIOCGRTIMEOUT = 1074545262
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const BIOCSRTIMEOUT = 2148287085
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const ELAST = 94
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const O_CLOEXEC = 0
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const SIOCAIFADDR = 2151967019
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const SIOCGIFSTATUS = 3274991931
@@ -159,27 +56,14 @@ pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const SizeofSockaddrDatalink = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const SizeofSockaddrUnix = 108
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const TIOCTIMESTAMP = 1074558041
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), func Mknod(string, uint32, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type BpfHdr struct, Pad_cgo_0 [2]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type RawSockaddrDatalink struct, Pad_cgo_0 [2]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type RawSockaddrUnix struct, Pad_cgo_0 [2]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Blksize uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Lspare int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Pad_cgo_0 [4]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const AF_MAX = 38
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const BIOCGRTIMEOUT = 1074545262
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const BIOCSRTIMEOUT = 2148287085
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const ELAST = 94
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const O_CLOEXEC = 0
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const SIOCAIFADDR = 2151967019
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const SIOCGIFSTATUS = 3274991931
@@ -203,43 +87,24 @@ pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const SizeofSockaddrDatalink = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const SizeofSockaddrUnix = 108
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const TIOCTIMESTAMP = 1074558041
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), func Mknod(string, uint32, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type BpfHdr struct, Pad_cgo_0 [2]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type RawSockaddrDatalink struct, Pad_cgo_0 [2]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type RawSockaddrUnix struct, Pad_cgo_0 [2]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Blksize uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Lspare int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Pad_cgo_0 [4]uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [88]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [88]int8
pkg syscall (linux-386), type Cmsghdr struct, X__cmsg_data [0]uint8
pkg syscall (linux-386-cgo), type Cmsghdr struct, X__cmsg_data [0]uint8
pkg syscall (linux-amd64), type Cmsghdr struct, X__cmsg_data [0]uint8
pkg syscall (linux-amd64-cgo), type Cmsghdr struct, X__cmsg_data [0]uint8
pkg syscall (linux-arm), type Cmsghdr struct, X__cmsg_data [0]uint8
pkg syscall (linux-arm-cgo), type Cmsghdr struct, X__cmsg_data [0]uint8
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), const SizeofIfData = 132
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), type IfMsghdr struct, Pad_cgo_1 [4]uint8
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), const SizeofIfData = 132
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), func Fchflags(string, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), type IfMsghdr struct, Pad_cgo_1 [4]uint8
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const BIOCGRTIMEOUT = 1074283118
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const BIOCSRTIMEOUT = 2148024941
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const RTF_FMASK = 63496
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const RTM_VERSION = 4
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SIOCBRDGDADDR = 2150132039
@@ -261,7 +126,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_GETITIMER = 86
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_GETRUSAGE = 117
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_GETTIMEOFDAY = 116
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_KEVENT = 270
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_LSTAT = 293
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_NANOSLEEP = 240
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_SELECT = 93
@@ -293,7 +157,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-386), type Timespec struct, Sec int32
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), type Timeval struct, Sec int32
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const BIOCGRTIMEOUT = 1074283118
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const BIOCSRTIMEOUT = 2148024941
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const RTF_FMASK = 63496
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const RTM_VERSION = 4
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SIOCBRDGDADDR = 2150132039
@@ -315,7 +178,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_GETITIMER = 86
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_GETRUSAGE = 117
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_GETTIMEOFDAY = 116
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_KEVENT = 270
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_LSTAT = 293
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_NANOSLEEP = 240
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_SELECT = 93
@@ -357,7 +219,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const EFER_NXE = 2048
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const EFER_NXE ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const EFER_SCE = 1
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const EFER_SCE ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const PMC5_PIPELINE_FLUSH = 21
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const PMC5_PIPELINE_FLUSH ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const RTF_FMASK = 63496
@@ -380,7 +241,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_GETITIMER = 86
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_GETRUSAGE = 117
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_GETTIMEOFDAY = 116
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_KEVENT = 270
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_LSTAT = 293
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_NANOSLEEP = 240
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_SELECT = 93
@@ -421,7 +281,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const EFER_NXE = 2048
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const EFER_NXE ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const EFER_SCE = 1
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const EFER_SCE ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const ImplementsGetwd = false
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const PMC5_PIPELINE_FLUSH = 21
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const PMC5_PIPELINE_FLUSH ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const RTF_FMASK = 63496
@@ -444,7 +303,6 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_GETITIMER = 86
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_GETRUSAGE = 117
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_GETTIMEOFDAY = 116
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_KEVENT = 270
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_LSTAT = 293
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_NANOSLEEP = 240
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_SELECT = 93
@@ -473,34 +331,15 @@ pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, F_spare [3]uint32
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Pad_cgo_1 [4]uint8
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), type Timespec struct, Pad_cgo_0 [4]uint8
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), type Timespec struct, Sec int32
pkg syscall (windows-386), const TOKEN_ALL_ACCESS = 983295
pkg syscall (windows-386), type AddrinfoW struct, Addr uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertChainPolicyPara struct, ExtraPolicyPara uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertChainPolicyStatus struct, ExtraPolicyStatus uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertContext struct, CertInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertRevocationInfo struct, CrlInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertRevocationInfo struct, OidSpecificInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertSimpleChain struct, TrustListInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-386), type RawSockaddrAny struct, Pad [96]int8
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const TOKEN_ALL_ACCESS = 983295
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type AddrinfoW struct, Addr uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertChainPolicyPara struct, ExtraPolicyPara uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertChainPolicyStatus struct, ExtraPolicyStatus uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertContext struct, CertInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertRevocationInfo struct, CrlInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertRevocationInfo struct, OidSpecificInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertSimpleChain struct, TrustListInfo uintptr
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type RawSockaddrAny struct, Pad [96]int8
pkg testing, func MainStart(func(string, string) (bool, error), []InternalTest, []InternalBenchmark, []InternalExample) *M
pkg testing, func RegisterCover(Cover)
pkg text/scanner, const GoTokens = 1012
pkg testing, func MainStart(func(string, string) (bool, error), []InternalTest, []InternalBenchmark, []InternalExample) *M
pkg text/template/parse, type DotNode bool
pkg text/template/parse, type Node interface { Copy, String, Type }
pkg unicode, const Version = "10.0.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "11.0.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "12.0.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "6.2.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "6.3.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "7.0.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "8.0.0"
pkg unicode, const Version = "9.0.0"
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_KILL = 37
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_KILL = 37

View File

@@ -1,627 +0,0 @@
pkg archive/tar, const FormatGNU = 8
pkg archive/tar, const FormatGNU Format
pkg archive/tar, const FormatPAX = 4
pkg archive/tar, const FormatPAX Format
pkg archive/tar, const FormatUSTAR = 2
pkg archive/tar, const FormatUSTAR Format
pkg archive/tar, const FormatUnknown = 0
pkg archive/tar, const FormatUnknown Format
pkg archive/tar, method (Format) String() string
pkg archive/tar, type Format int
pkg archive/tar, type Header struct, Format Format
pkg archive/tar, type Header struct, PAXRecords map[string]string
pkg archive/zip, method (*Writer) SetComment(string) error
pkg archive/zip, type FileHeader struct, Modified time.Time
pkg archive/zip, type FileHeader struct, NonUTF8 bool
pkg bufio, method (*Reader) Size() int
pkg bufio, method (*Writer) Size() int
pkg crypto/tls, const ECDSAWithSHA1 = 515
pkg crypto/tls, const ECDSAWithSHA1 SignatureScheme
pkg crypto/x509, const CANotAuthorizedForExtKeyUsage = 9
pkg crypto/x509, const CANotAuthorizedForExtKeyUsage InvalidReason
pkg crypto/x509, const ExtKeyUsageMicrosoftCommercialCodeSigning = 12
pkg crypto/x509, const ExtKeyUsageMicrosoftCommercialCodeSigning ExtKeyUsage
pkg crypto/x509, const ExtKeyUsageMicrosoftKernelCodeSigning = 13
pkg crypto/x509, const ExtKeyUsageMicrosoftKernelCodeSigning ExtKeyUsage
pkg crypto/x509, const NameConstraintsWithoutSANs = 6
pkg crypto/x509, const NameConstraintsWithoutSANs InvalidReason
pkg crypto/x509, const TooManyConstraints = 8
pkg crypto/x509, const TooManyConstraints InvalidReason
pkg crypto/x509, const UnconstrainedName = 7
pkg crypto/x509, const UnconstrainedName InvalidReason
pkg crypto/x509, func MarshalPKCS1PublicKey(*rsa.PublicKey) []uint8
pkg crypto/x509, func MarshalPKCS8PrivateKey(interface{}) ([]uint8, error)
pkg crypto/x509, func ParsePKCS1PublicKey([]uint8) (*rsa.PublicKey, error)
pkg crypto/x509, method (PublicKeyAlgorithm) String() string
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, ExcludedEmailAddresses []string
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, ExcludedIPRanges []*net.IPNet
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, ExcludedURIDomains []string
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, PermittedEmailAddresses []string
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, PermittedIPRanges []*net.IPNet
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, PermittedURIDomains []string
pkg crypto/x509, type Certificate struct, URIs []*url.URL
pkg crypto/x509, type CertificateInvalidError struct, Detail string
pkg crypto/x509, type CertificateRequest struct, URIs []*url.URL
pkg crypto/x509, type VerifyOptions struct, MaxConstraintComparisions int
pkg crypto/x509/pkix, method (Name) String() string
pkg crypto/x509/pkix, method (RDNSequence) String() string
pkg database/sql, func OpenDB(driver.Connector) *DB
pkg database/sql/driver, type Connector interface { Connect, Driver }
pkg database/sql/driver, type Connector interface, Connect(context.Context) (Conn, error)
pkg database/sql/driver, type Connector interface, Driver() Driver
pkg database/sql/driver, type DriverContext interface { OpenConnector }
pkg database/sql/driver, type DriverContext interface, OpenConnector(string) (Connector, error)
pkg database/sql/driver, type SessionResetter interface { ResetSession }
pkg database/sql/driver, type SessionResetter interface, ResetSession(context.Context) error
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_16 = 20
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_16 R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_32PLT = 11
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_32PLT R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_8 = 22
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_8 R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_GOT32X = 43
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_GOT32X R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_IRELATIVE = 42
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_IRELATIVE R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_PC16 = 21
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_PC16 R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_PC8 = 23
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_PC8 R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_SIZE32 = 38
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_SIZE32 R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_TLS_DESC = 41
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_TLS_DESC R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_TLS_DESC_CALL = 40
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_TLS_DESC_CALL R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_TLS_GOTDESC = 39
pkg debug/elf, const R_386_TLS_GOTDESC R_386
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_LD64_GOTOFF_LO15 = 310
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_LD64_GOTOFF_LO15 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_LD64_GOTPAGE_LO15 = 313
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_LD64_GOTPAGE_LO15 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSGD_ADR_PREL21 = 512
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSGD_ADR_PREL21 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSGD_MOVW_G0_NC = 516
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSGD_MOVW_G0_NC R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSGD_MOVW_G1 = 515
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSGD_MOVW_G1 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21 = 518
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_ADR_PREL21 = 517
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_ADR_PREL21 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12 = 572
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12_NC = 573
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12_NC R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12 = 570
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12 R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12_NC = 571
pkg debug/elf, const R_AARCH64_TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12_NC R_AARCH64
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ABS32_NOI = 55
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ABS32_NOI R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PCREL_15_8 = 33
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PCREL_15_8 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PCREL_23_15 = 34
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PCREL_23_15 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PCREL_7_0 = 32
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PCREL_7_0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G0 = 58
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G0_NC = 57
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G0_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G1 = 60
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G1_NC = 59
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G1_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G2 = 61
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_PC_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SBREL_19_12_NC = 36
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SBREL_19_12_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SBREL_27_20_CK = 37
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SBREL_27_20_CK R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G0 = 71
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G0_NC = 70
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G0_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G1 = 73
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G1_NC = 72
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G1_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G2 = 74
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ALU_SB_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_BASE_ABS = 31
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_BASE_ABS R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_CALL = 28
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_CALL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOTOFF12 = 98
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOTOFF12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOTRELAX = 99
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOTRELAX R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOT_ABS = 95
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOT_ABS R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOT_BREL12 = 97
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOT_BREL12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOT_PREL = 96
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_GOT_PREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_IRELATIVE = 160
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_IRELATIVE R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_JUMP24 = 29
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_JUMP24 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_PC_G0 = 67
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_PC_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_PC_G1 = 68
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_PC_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_PC_G2 = 69
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_PC_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_SB_G0 = 81
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_SB_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_SB_G1 = 82
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_SB_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_SB_G2 = 83
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDC_SB_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_PC_G0 = 64
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_PC_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_PC_G1 = 65
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_PC_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_PC_G2 = 66
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_PC_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_SB_G0 = 78
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_SB_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_SB_G1 = 79
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_SB_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_SB_G2 = 80
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDRS_SB_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_PC_G1 = 62
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_PC_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_PC_G2 = 63
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_PC_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SBREL_11_10_NC = 35
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SBREL_11_10_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SB_G0 = 75
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SB_G0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SB_G1 = 76
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SB_G1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SB_G2 = 77
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_LDR_SB_G2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ME_TOO = 128
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_ME_TOO R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVT_ABS = 44
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVT_ABS R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVT_BREL = 85
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVT_BREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVT_PREL = 46
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVT_PREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_ABS_NC = 43
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_ABS_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_BREL = 86
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_BREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_BREL_NC = 84
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_BREL_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_PREL_NC = 45
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_MOVW_PREL_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PLT32_ABS = 94
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PLT32_ABS R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PREL31 = 42
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PREL31 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_0 = 112
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_1 = 113
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_10 = 122
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_10 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_11 = 123
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_11 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_12 = 124
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_13 = 125
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_13 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_14 = 126
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_14 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_15 = 127
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_15 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_2 = 114
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_3 = 115
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_3 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_4 = 116
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_4 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_5 = 117
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_5 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_6 = 118
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_6 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_7 = 119
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_7 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_8 = 120
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_8 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_9 = 121
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_PRIVATE_9 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_REL32_NOI = 56
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_REL32_NOI R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_RXPC25 = 249
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_RXPC25 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_SBREL31 = 39
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_SBREL31 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TARGET1 = 38
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TARGET1 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TARGET2 = 41
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TARGET2 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G0_NC = 132
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G0_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G1_NC = 133
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G1_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G2_NC = 134
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G2_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G3 = 135
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_ABS_G3 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_PREL_11_0 = 53
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_ALU_PREL_11_0 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_GOT_BREL12 = 131
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_GOT_BREL12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP11 = 102
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP11 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP19 = 51
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP19 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP24 = 30
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP24 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP6 = 52
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP6 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP8 = 103
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_JUMP8 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVT_ABS = 48
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVT_ABS R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVT_BREL = 88
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVT_BREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVT_PREL = 50
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVT_PREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_ABS_NC = 47
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_ABS_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_BREL = 89
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_BREL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_BREL_NC = 87
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_BREL_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_PREL_NC = 49
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_MOVW_PREL_NC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_PC12 = 54
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_PC12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_TLS_CALL = 93
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_TLS_CALL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_TLS_DESCSEQ16 = 129
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_TLS_DESCSEQ16 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_TLS_DESCSEQ32 = 130
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_THM_TLS_DESCSEQ32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_CALL = 91
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_CALL R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_DESCSEQ = 92
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_DESCSEQ R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_DTPMOD32 = 17
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_DTPMOD32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_DTPOFF32 = 18
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_DTPOFF32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_GD32 = 104
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_GD32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_GOTDESC = 90
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_GOTDESC R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_IE12GP = 111
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_IE12GP R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_IE32 = 107
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_IE32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LDM32 = 105
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LDM32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LDO12 = 109
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LDO12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LDO32 = 106
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LDO32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LE12 = 110
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LE12 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LE32 = 108
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_LE32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_TPOFF32 = 19
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_TLS_TPOFF32 R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_V4BX = 40
pkg debug/elf, const R_ARM_V4BX R_ARM
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ADDR16_HIGH = 110
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ADDR16_HIGH R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ADDR16_HIGHA = 111
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ADDR16_HIGHA R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ADDR64_LOCAL = 117
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ADDR64_LOCAL R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGH = 114
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGH R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGHA = 115
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGHA R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ENTRY = 118
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_ENTRY R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_IRELATIVE = 248
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_IRELATIVE R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_JMP_IREL = 247
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_JMP_IREL R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLT16_LO_DS = 60
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLT16_LO_DS R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16 = 52
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16 R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_DS = 65
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_DS R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_HA = 55
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_HA R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_HI = 54
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_HI R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_LO = 53
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT16_LO R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT_LO_DS = 66
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_PLTGOT_LO_DS R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_REL16DX_HA = 246
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_REL16DX_HA R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC = 116
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_SECTOFF_DS = 61
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_SECTOFF_DS R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_SECTOFF_LO_DS = 61
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_SECTOFF_LO_DS R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_TOCSAVE = 109
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_TOCSAVE R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGH = 112
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGH R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGHA = 113
pkg debug/elf, const R_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGHA R_PPC64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOT64 = 27
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOT64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTOFF64 = 25
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTOFF64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPC32 = 26
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPC32 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPC32_TLSDESC = 34
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPC32_TLSDESC R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPC64 = 29
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPC64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPCREL64 = 28
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPCREL64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPCRELX = 41
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPCRELX R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPLT64 = 30
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_GOTPLT64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_IRELATIVE = 37
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_IRELATIVE R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PC32_BND = 39
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PC32_BND R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PC64 = 24
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PC64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PLT32_BND = 40
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PLT32_BND R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PLTOFF64 = 31
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_PLTOFF64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_RELATIVE64 = 38
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_RELATIVE64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_REX_GOTPCRELX = 42
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_REX_GOTPCRELX R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_SIZE32 = 32
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_SIZE32 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_SIZE64 = 33
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_SIZE64 R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_TLSDESC = 36
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_TLSDESC R_X86_64
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_TLSDESC_CALL = 35
pkg debug/elf, const R_X86_64_TLSDESC_CALL R_X86_64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_ADDEND = 10
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_ADDEND RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_BRANCH26 = 2
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_BRANCH26 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_GOT_LOAD_PAGE21 = 5
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_GOT_LOAD_PAGE21 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_GOT_LOAD_PAGEOFF12 = 6
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_GOT_LOAD_PAGEOFF12 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_PAGE21 = 3
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_PAGE21 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_PAGEOFF12 = 4
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_PAGEOFF12 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_POINTER_TO_GOT = 7
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_POINTER_TO_GOT RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR = 1
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_TLVP_LOAD_PAGE21 = 8
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_TLVP_LOAD_PAGE21 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_TLVP_LOAD_PAGEOFF12 = 9
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_TLVP_LOAD_PAGEOFF12 RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_UNSIGNED = 0
pkg debug/macho, const ARM64_RELOC_UNSIGNED RelocTypeARM64
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_BR24 = 5
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_BR24 RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_HALF = 8
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_HALF RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_HALF_SECTDIFF = 9
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_HALF_SECTDIFF RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_LOCAL_SECTDIFF = 3
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_LOCAL_SECTDIFF RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_PAIR = 1
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_PAIR RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_PB_LA_PTR = 4
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_PB_LA_PTR RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_SECTDIFF = 2
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_SECTDIFF RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_VANILLA = 0
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_RELOC_VANILLA RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_THUMB_32BIT_BRANCH = 7
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_THUMB_32BIT_BRANCH RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_THUMB_RELOC_BR22 = 6
pkg debug/macho, const ARM_THUMB_RELOC_BR22 RelocTypeARM
pkg debug/macho, const FlagAllModsBound = 4096
pkg debug/macho, const FlagAllModsBound uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagAllowStackExecution = 131072
pkg debug/macho, const FlagAllowStackExecution uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagAppExtensionSafe = 33554432
pkg debug/macho, const FlagAppExtensionSafe uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagBindAtLoad = 8
pkg debug/macho, const FlagBindAtLoad uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagBindsToWeak = 65536
pkg debug/macho, const FlagBindsToWeak uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagCanonical = 16384
pkg debug/macho, const FlagCanonical uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagDeadStrippableDylib = 4194304
pkg debug/macho, const FlagDeadStrippableDylib uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagDyldLink = 4
pkg debug/macho, const FlagDyldLink uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagForceFlat = 256
pkg debug/macho, const FlagForceFlat uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagHasTLVDescriptors = 8388608
pkg debug/macho, const FlagHasTLVDescriptors uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagIncrLink = 2
pkg debug/macho, const FlagIncrLink uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagLazyInit = 64
pkg debug/macho, const FlagLazyInit uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoFixPrebinding = 1024
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoFixPrebinding uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoHeapExecution = 16777216
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoHeapExecution uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoMultiDefs = 512
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoMultiDefs uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoReexportedDylibs = 1048576
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoReexportedDylibs uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoUndefs = 1
pkg debug/macho, const FlagNoUndefs uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagPIE = 2097152
pkg debug/macho, const FlagPIE uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagPrebindable = 2048
pkg debug/macho, const FlagPrebindable uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagPrebound = 16
pkg debug/macho, const FlagPrebound uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagRootSafe = 262144
pkg debug/macho, const FlagRootSafe uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagSetuidSafe = 524288
pkg debug/macho, const FlagSetuidSafe uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagSplitSegs = 32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagSplitSegs uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagSubsectionsViaSymbols = 8192
pkg debug/macho, const FlagSubsectionsViaSymbols uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagTwoLevel = 128
pkg debug/macho, const FlagTwoLevel uint32
pkg debug/macho, const FlagWeakDefines = 32768
pkg debug/macho, const FlagWeakDefines uint32
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_LOCAL_SECTDIFF = 4
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_LOCAL_SECTDIFF RelocTypeGeneric
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_PAIR = 1
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_PAIR RelocTypeGeneric
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_PB_LA_PTR = 3
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_PB_LA_PTR RelocTypeGeneric
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_SECTDIFF = 2
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_SECTDIFF RelocTypeGeneric
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_TLV = 5
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_TLV RelocTypeGeneric
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_VANILLA = 0
pkg debug/macho, const GENERIC_RELOC_VANILLA RelocTypeGeneric
pkg debug/macho, const LoadCmdRpath = 2147483676
pkg debug/macho, const LoadCmdRpath LoadCmd
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_BRANCH = 2
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_BRANCH RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_GOT = 4
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_GOT RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_GOT_LOAD = 3
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_GOT_LOAD RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED = 1
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED_1 = 6
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED_1 RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED_2 = 7
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED_2 RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED_4 = 8
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED_4 RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR = 5
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_TLV = 9
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_TLV RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_UNSIGNED = 0
pkg debug/macho, const X86_64_RELOC_UNSIGNED RelocTypeX86_64
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeARM) GoString() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeARM) String() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeARM64) GoString() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeARM64) String() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeGeneric) GoString() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeGeneric) String() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeX86_64) GoString() string
pkg debug/macho, method (RelocTypeX86_64) String() string
pkg debug/macho, method (Rpath) Raw() []uint8
pkg debug/macho, method (Type) GoString() string
pkg debug/macho, method (Type) String() string
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Addr uint32
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Extern bool
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Len uint8
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Pcrel bool
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Scattered bool
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Type uint8
pkg debug/macho, type Reloc struct, Value uint32
pkg debug/macho, type RelocTypeARM int
pkg debug/macho, type RelocTypeARM64 int
pkg debug/macho, type RelocTypeGeneric int
pkg debug/macho, type RelocTypeX86_64 int
pkg debug/macho, type Rpath struct
pkg debug/macho, type Rpath struct, Path string
pkg debug/macho, type Rpath struct, embedded LoadBytes
pkg debug/macho, type RpathCmd struct
pkg debug/macho, type RpathCmd struct, Cmd LoadCmd
pkg debug/macho, type RpathCmd struct, Len uint32
pkg debug/macho, type RpathCmd struct, Path uint32
pkg debug/macho, type Section struct, Relocs []Reloc
pkg encoding/asn1, const TagNumericString = 18
pkg encoding/asn1, const TagNumericString ideal-int
pkg encoding/asn1, func MarshalWithParams(interface{}, string) ([]uint8, error)
pkg encoding/csv, type ParseError struct, StartLine int
pkg encoding/hex, func NewDecoder(io.Reader) io.Reader
pkg encoding/hex, func NewEncoder(io.Writer) io.Writer
pkg encoding/json, method (*Decoder) DisallowUnknownFields()
pkg encoding/xml, func NewTokenDecoder(TokenReader) *Decoder
pkg encoding/xml, type TokenReader interface { Token }
pkg encoding/xml, type TokenReader interface, Token() (Token, error)
pkg flag, method (*FlagSet) ErrorHandling() ErrorHandling
pkg flag, method (*FlagSet) Name() string
pkg flag, method (*FlagSet) Output() io.Writer
pkg html/template, type Srcset string
pkg math, func Erfcinv(float64) float64
pkg math, func Erfinv(float64) float64
pkg math, func Round(float64) float64
pkg math, func RoundToEven(float64) float64
pkg math/big, const MaxBase = 62
pkg math/big, method (*Float) Sqrt(*Float) *Float
pkg math/big, method (*Int) CmpAbs(*Int) int
pkg math/rand, func Shuffle(int, func(int, int))
pkg math/rand, method (*Rand) Shuffle(int, func(int, int))
pkg net, method (*TCPListener) SyscallConn() (syscall.RawConn, error)
pkg net, method (*UnixListener) SyscallConn() (syscall.RawConn, error)
pkg net/smtp, method (*Client) Noop() error
pkg os, func IsTimeout(error) bool
pkg os, method (*File) SetDeadline(time.Time) error
pkg os, method (*File) SetReadDeadline(time.Time) error
pkg os, method (*File) SetWriteDeadline(time.Time) error
pkg os, method (*PathError) Timeout() bool
pkg os, method (*SyscallError) Timeout() bool
pkg os, var ErrNoDeadline error
pkg strings, method (*Builder) Grow(int)
pkg strings, method (*Builder) Len() int
pkg strings, method (*Builder) Reset()
pkg strings, method (*Builder) String() string
pkg strings, method (*Builder) Write([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg strings, method (*Builder) WriteByte(uint8) error
pkg strings, method (*Builder) WriteRune(int32) (int, error)
pkg strings, method (*Builder) WriteString(string) (int, error)
pkg strings, type Builder struct
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const SYS_UTIMENSAT ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const SYS_UTIMENSAT ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const SYS_UTIMENSAT ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_UTIMENSAT ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const SYS_UTIMENSAT ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const SYS_UTIMENSAT ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), func CreateProcessAsUser(Token, *uint16, *uint16, *SecurityAttributes, *SecurityAttributes, bool, uint32, *uint16, *uint16, *StartupInfo, *ProcessInformation) error
pkg syscall (windows-386), type SysProcAttr struct, Token Token
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), func CreateProcessAsUser(Token, *uint16, *uint16, *SecurityAttributes, *SecurityAttributes, bool, uint32, *uint16, *uint16, *StartupInfo, *ProcessInformation) error
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type SysProcAttr struct, Token Token
pkg time, func LoadLocationFromTZData(string, []uint8) (*Location, error)
pkg unicode, const Version = "10.0.0"
pkg unicode, var Masaram_Gondi *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Nushu *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Regional_Indicator *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Soyombo *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Zanabazar_Square *RangeTable

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@@ -1,559 +0,0 @@
pkg crypto/cipher, func NewGCMWithTagSize(Block, int) (AEAD, error)
pkg crypto/rsa, method (*PrivateKey) Size() int
pkg crypto/rsa, method (*PublicKey) Size() int
pkg crypto/tls, method (*ConnectionState) ExportKeyingMaterial(string, []uint8, int) ([]uint8, error)
pkg database/sql, method (IsolationLevel) String() string
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, Idle int
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, InUse int
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, MaxIdleClosed int64
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, MaxLifetimeClosed int64
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, MaxOpenConnections int
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, WaitCount int64
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, WaitDuration time.Duration
pkg debug/elf, const ELFOSABI_AROS = 15
pkg debug/elf, const ELFOSABI_AROS OSABI
pkg debug/elf, const ELFOSABI_CLOUDABI = 17
pkg debug/elf, const ELFOSABI_CLOUDABI OSABI
pkg debug/elf, const ELFOSABI_FENIXOS = 16
pkg debug/elf, const ELFOSABI_FENIXOS OSABI
pkg debug/elf, const EM_56800EX = 200
pkg debug/elf, const EM_56800EX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC05 = 72
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC05 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC08 = 71
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC08 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC11 = 70
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC11 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC16 = 69
pkg debug/elf, const EM_68HC16 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_78KOR = 199
pkg debug/elf, const EM_78KOR Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_8051 = 165
pkg debug/elf, const EM_8051 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ALTERA_NIOS2 = 113
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ALTERA_NIOS2 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_AMDGPU = 224
pkg debug/elf, const EM_AMDGPU Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ARCA = 109
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ARCA Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ARC_COMPACT = 93
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ARC_COMPACT Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ARC_COMPACT2 = 195
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ARC_COMPACT2 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_AVR = 83
pkg debug/elf, const EM_AVR Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_AVR32 = 185
pkg debug/elf, const EM_AVR32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BA1 = 201
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BA1 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BA2 = 202
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BA2 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BLACKFIN = 106
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BLACKFIN Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BPF = 247
pkg debug/elf, const EM_BPF Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_C166 = 116
pkg debug/elf, const EM_C166 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CDP = 215
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CDP Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CE = 119
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CLOUDSHIELD = 192
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CLOUDSHIELD Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COGE = 216
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COGE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COOL = 217
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COOL Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COREA_1ST = 193
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COREA_1ST Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COREA_2ND = 194
pkg debug/elf, const EM_COREA_2ND Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CR = 103
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CR Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CR16 = 177
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CR16 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CRAYNV2 = 172
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CRAYNV2 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CRIS = 76
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CRIS Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CRX = 114
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CRX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CSR_KALIMBA = 219
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CSR_KALIMBA Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CUDA = 190
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CUDA Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CYPRESS_M8C = 161
pkg debug/elf, const EM_CYPRESS_M8C Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_D10V = 85
pkg debug/elf, const EM_D10V Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_D30V = 86
pkg debug/elf, const EM_D30V Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_DSP24 = 136
pkg debug/elf, const EM_DSP24 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_DSPIC30F = 118
pkg debug/elf, const EM_DSPIC30F Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_DXP = 112
pkg debug/elf, const EM_DXP Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG1 = 168
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG1 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG16 = 176
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG16 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG1X = 168
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG1X Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG2 = 134
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ECOG2 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ETPU = 178
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ETPU Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_EXCESS = 111
pkg debug/elf, const EM_EXCESS Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_F2MC16 = 104
pkg debug/elf, const EM_F2MC16 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FIREPATH = 78
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FIREPATH Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FR30 = 84
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FR30 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FT32 = 222
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FT32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FX66 = 66
pkg debug/elf, const EM_FX66 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_HUANY = 81
pkg debug/elf, const EM_HUANY Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL205 = 205
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL205 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL206 = 206
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL206 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL207 = 207
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL207 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL208 = 208
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL208 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL209 = 209
pkg debug/elf, const EM_INTEL209 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_IP2K = 101
pkg debug/elf, const EM_IP2K Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_JAVELIN = 77
pkg debug/elf, const EM_JAVELIN Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_K10M = 181
pkg debug/elf, const EM_K10M Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KM32 = 210
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KM32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KMX16 = 212
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KMX16 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KMX32 = 211
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KMX32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KMX8 = 213
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KMX8 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KVARC = 214
pkg debug/elf, const EM_KVARC Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_L10M = 180
pkg debug/elf, const EM_L10M Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_LANAI = 244
pkg debug/elf, const EM_LANAI Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_LATTICEMICO32 = 138
pkg debug/elf, const EM_LATTICEMICO32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_M16C = 117
pkg debug/elf, const EM_M16C Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_M32C = 120
pkg debug/elf, const EM_M32C Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_M32R = 88
pkg debug/elf, const EM_M32R Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MANIK = 171
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MANIK Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MAX = 102
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MAX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MAXQ30 = 169
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MAXQ30 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MCHP_PIC = 204
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MCHP_PIC Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MCST_ELBRUS = 175
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MCST_ELBRUS Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_METAG = 174
pkg debug/elf, const EM_METAG Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MICROBLAZE = 189
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MICROBLAZE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MMDSP_PLUS = 160
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MMDSP_PLUS Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MMIX = 80
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MMIX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MN10200 = 90
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MN10200 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MN10300 = 89
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MN10300 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MOXIE = 223
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MOXIE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MSP430 = 105
pkg debug/elf, const EM_MSP430 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_NDS32 = 167
pkg debug/elf, const EM_NDS32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_NORC = 218
pkg debug/elf, const EM_NORC Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_NS32K = 97
pkg debug/elf, const EM_NS32K Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_OPEN8 = 196
pkg debug/elf, const EM_OPEN8 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_OPENRISC = 92
pkg debug/elf, const EM_OPENRISC Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PDP10 = 64
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PDP10 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PDP11 = 65
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PDP11 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PDSP = 63
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PDSP Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PJ = 91
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PJ Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PRISM = 82
pkg debug/elf, const EM_PRISM Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_QDSP6 = 164
pkg debug/elf, const EM_QDSP6 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_R32C = 162
pkg debug/elf, const EM_R32C Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RISCV = 243
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RISCV Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RL78 = 197
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RL78 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RS08 = 132
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RS08 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RX = 173
pkg debug/elf, const EM_RX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SCORE7 = 135
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SCORE7 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SEP = 108
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SEP Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SE_C17 = 139
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SE_C17 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SE_C33 = 107
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SE_C33 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SHARC = 133
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SHARC Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SLE9X = 179
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SLE9X Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SNP1K = 99
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SNP1K Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST19 = 74
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST19 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST200 = 100
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST200 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST7 = 68
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST7 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST9PLUS = 67
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ST9PLUS Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_STM8 = 186
pkg debug/elf, const EM_STM8 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_STXP7X = 166
pkg debug/elf, const EM_STXP7X Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SVX = 73
pkg debug/elf, const EM_SVX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TILE64 = 187
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TILE64 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TILEGX = 191
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TILEGX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TILEPRO = 188
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TILEPRO Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_ARP32 = 143
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_ARP32 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_C2000 = 141
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_C2000 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_C5500 = 142
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_C5500 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_C6000 = 140
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_C6000 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_PRU = 144
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TI_PRU Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TMM_GPP = 96
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TMM_GPP Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TPC = 98
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TPC Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TRIMEDIA = 163
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TRIMEDIA Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TSK3000 = 131
pkg debug/elf, const EM_TSK3000 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_UNICORE = 110
pkg debug/elf, const EM_UNICORE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_V850 = 87
pkg debug/elf, const EM_V850 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VAX = 75
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VAX Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VIDEOCORE = 95
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VIDEOCORE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VIDEOCORE3 = 137
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VIDEOCORE3 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VIDEOCORE5 = 198
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VIDEOCORE5 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VISIUM = 221
pkg debug/elf, const EM_VISIUM Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XCORE = 203
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XCORE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XGATE = 115
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XGATE Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XIMO16 = 170
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XIMO16 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XTENSA = 94
pkg debug/elf, const EM_XTENSA Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_Z80 = 220
pkg debug/elf, const EM_Z80 Machine
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ZSP = 79
pkg debug/elf, const EM_ZSP Machine
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_32 = 1
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_64 = 2
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_64 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD16 = 34
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD16 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD32 = 35
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD64 = 36
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD64 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD8 = 33
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ADD8 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ALIGN = 43
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_ALIGN R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_BRANCH = 16
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_BRANCH R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_CALL = 18
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_CALL R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_CALL_PLT = 19
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_CALL_PLT R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_COPY = 4
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_COPY R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GNU_VTENTRY = 42
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GNU_VTENTRY R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GNU_VTINHERIT = 41
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GNU_VTINHERIT R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GOT_HI20 = 20
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GOT_HI20 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GPREL_I = 47
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GPREL_I R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GPREL_S = 48
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_GPREL_S R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_HI20 = 26
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_HI20 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_JAL = 17
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_JAL R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_JUMP_SLOT = 5
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_JUMP_SLOT R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_LO12_I = 27
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_LO12_I R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_LO12_S = 28
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_LO12_S R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_NONE = 0
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_NONE R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_PCREL_HI20 = 23
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_PCREL_HI20 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_I = 24
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_I R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_S = 25
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_S R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RELATIVE = 3
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RELATIVE R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RELAX = 51
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RELAX R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RVC_BRANCH = 44
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RVC_BRANCH R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RVC_JUMP = 45
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RVC_JUMP R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RVC_LUI = 46
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_RVC_LUI R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET16 = 55
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET16 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET32 = 56
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET6 = 53
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET6 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET8 = 54
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SET8 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB16 = 38
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB16 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB32 = 39
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB6 = 52
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB6 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB64 = 40
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB64 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB8 = 37
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_SUB8 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPMOD32 = 6
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPMOD32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPMOD64 = 7
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPMOD64 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPREL32 = 8
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPREL32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPREL64 = 9
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_DTPREL64 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_GD_HI20 = 22
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_GD_HI20 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_GOT_HI20 = 21
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_GOT_HI20 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_TPREL32 = 10
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_TPREL32 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_TPREL64 = 11
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TLS_TPREL64 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_ADD = 32
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_ADD R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_HI20 = 29
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_HI20 R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_I = 49
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_I R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_LO12_I = 30
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_LO12_I R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_LO12_S = 31
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_LO12_S R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_S = 50
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_TPREL_S R_RISCV
pkg debug/elf, method (R_RISCV) GoString() string
pkg debug/elf, method (R_RISCV) String() string
pkg debug/elf, type R_RISCV int
pkg debug/macho, const CpuArm64 = 16777228
pkg debug/macho, const CpuArm64 Cpu
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_ARCHITECTURE = 7
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_ARCHITECTURE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_BASERELOC = 5
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_BASERELOC ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_BOUND_IMPORT = 11
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_BOUND_IMPORT ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_COM_DESCRIPTOR = 14
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_COM_DESCRIPTOR ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_DEBUG = 6
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_DEBUG ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_DELAY_IMPORT = 13
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_DELAY_IMPORT ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_EXCEPTION = 3
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_EXCEPTION ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_EXPORT = 0
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_EXPORT ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_GLOBALPTR = 8
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_GLOBALPTR ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_IAT = 12
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_IAT ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_IMPORT = 1
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_IMPORT ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_LOAD_CONFIG = 10
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_LOAD_CONFIG ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_RESOURCE = 2
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_RESOURCE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_SECURITY = 4
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_SECURITY ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_TLS = 9
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_TLS ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_ARM64 = 43620
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_ARM64 ideal-int
pkg go/ast, type CompositeLit struct, Incomplete bool
pkg go/token, method (*File) AddLineColumnInfo(int, string, int, int)
pkg go/types, func NewInterfaceType([]*Func, []Type) *Interface
pkg go/types, method (*Interface) EmbeddedType(int) Type
pkg go/types, method (*Var) Embedded() bool
pkg net, method (*ListenConfig) Listen(context.Context, string, string) (Listener, error)
pkg net, method (*ListenConfig) ListenPacket(context.Context, string, string) (PacketConn, error)
pkg net, type Dialer struct, Control func(string, string, syscall.RawConn) error
pkg net, type ListenConfig struct
pkg net, type ListenConfig struct, Control func(string, string, syscall.RawConn) error
pkg net/http, const SameSiteDefaultMode = 1
pkg net/http, const SameSiteDefaultMode SameSite
pkg net/http, const SameSiteLaxMode = 2
pkg net/http, const SameSiteLaxMode SameSite
pkg net/http, const SameSiteStrictMode = 3
pkg net/http, const SameSiteStrictMode SameSite
pkg net/http, const StatusMisdirectedRequest = 421
pkg net/http, const StatusMisdirectedRequest ideal-int
pkg net/http, type Cookie struct, SameSite SameSite
pkg net/http, type SameSite int
pkg net/http, type Transport struct, MaxConnsPerHost int
pkg net/http/httptrace, type ClientTrace struct, Got1xxResponse func(int, textproto.MIMEHeader) error
pkg net/http/httptrace, type ClientTrace struct, WroteHeaderField func(string, []string)
pkg net/http/httputil, type ReverseProxy struct, ErrorHandler func(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request, error)
pkg os, const ModeIrregular = 524288
pkg os, const ModeIrregular FileMode
pkg os, const ModeType = 2399666176
pkg os, func UserCacheDir() (string, error)
pkg os/signal, func Ignored(os.Signal) bool
pkg regexp/syntax, method (Op) String() string
pkg runtime/trace, func IsEnabled() bool
pkg runtime/trace, func Log(context.Context, string, string)
pkg runtime/trace, func Logf(context.Context, string, string, ...interface{})
pkg runtime/trace, func NewTask(context.Context, string) (context.Context, *Task)
pkg runtime/trace, func StartRegion(context.Context, string) *Region
pkg runtime/trace, func WithRegion(context.Context, string, func())
pkg runtime/trace, method (*Region) End()
pkg runtime/trace, method (*Task) End()
pkg runtime/trace, type Region struct
pkg runtime/trace, type Task struct
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SOCK_CLOEXEC = 32768
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SOCK_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SOCK_NONBLOCK = 16384
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SOCK_NONBLOCK ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_ACCEPT4 = 93
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_ACCEPT4 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_PIPE2 = 101
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const SYS_PIPE2 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SOCK_CLOEXEC = 32768
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SOCK_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SOCK_NONBLOCK = 16384
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SOCK_NONBLOCK ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_ACCEPT4 = 93
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_ACCEPT4 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_PIPE2 = 101
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_PIPE2 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SOCK_CLOEXEC = 32768
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SOCK_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SOCK_NONBLOCK = 16384
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SOCK_NONBLOCK ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_ACCEPT4 = 93
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_ACCEPT4 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_PIPE2 = 101
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const SYS_PIPE2 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SOCK_CLOEXEC = 32768
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SOCK_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SOCK_NONBLOCK = 16384
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SOCK_NONBLOCK ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_ACCEPT4 = 93
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_ACCEPT4 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_PIPE2 = 101
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_PIPE2 ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), func Accept4(int, int) (int, Sockaddr, error)
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), func Pipe2([]int, int) error
pkg syscall (windows-386), const TOKEN_ADJUST_SESSIONID = 256
pkg syscall (windows-386), const TOKEN_ADJUST_SESSIONID ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), const TOKEN_ALL_ACCESS = 983551
pkg syscall (windows-386), type AddrinfoW struct, Addr Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertChainPolicyPara struct, ExtraPolicyPara Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertChainPolicyStatus struct, ExtraPolicyStatus Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertContext struct, CertInfo *CertInfo
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertInfo struct
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertRevocationCrlInfo struct
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertRevocationInfo struct, CrlInfo *CertRevocationCrlInfo
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertRevocationInfo struct, OidSpecificInfo Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertSimpleChain struct, TrustListInfo *CertTrustListInfo
pkg syscall (windows-386), type CertTrustListInfo struct
pkg syscall (windows-386), type Pointer *struct
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const TOKEN_ADJUST_SESSIONID = 256
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const TOKEN_ADJUST_SESSIONID ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const TOKEN_ALL_ACCESS = 983551
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type AddrinfoW struct, Addr Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertChainPolicyPara struct, ExtraPolicyPara Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertChainPolicyStatus struct, ExtraPolicyStatus Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertContext struct, CertInfo *CertInfo
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertInfo struct
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertRevocationCrlInfo struct
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertRevocationInfo struct, CrlInfo *CertRevocationCrlInfo
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertRevocationInfo struct, OidSpecificInfo Pointer
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertSimpleChain struct, TrustListInfo *CertTrustListInfo
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type CertTrustListInfo struct
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type Pointer *struct
pkg syscall, const ImplementsGetwd = true
pkg text/template/parse, type PipeNode struct, IsAssign bool

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@@ -1,228 +0,0 @@
pkg bytes, func ReplaceAll([]uint8, []uint8, []uint8) []uint8
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 = 4865
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 uint16
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 = 4866
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 uint16
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 = 4867
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 uint16
pkg crypto/tls, const VersionTLS13 = 772
pkg crypto/tls, const VersionTLS13 ideal-int
pkg crypto/tls, type RecordHeaderError struct, Conn net.Conn
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_32_PCREL = 57
pkg debug/elf, const R_RISCV_32_PCREL R_RISCV
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_ARMNT = 452
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_MACHINE_ARMNT ideal-int
pkg expvar, method (*Map) Delete(string)
pkg go/doc, const PreserveAST = 4
pkg go/doc, const PreserveAST Mode
pkg go/importer, func ForCompiler(*token.FileSet, string, Lookup) types.Importer
pkg go/token, method (*File) LineStart(int) Pos
pkg io, type StringWriter interface { WriteString }
pkg io, type StringWriter interface, WriteString(string) (int, error)
pkg log, method (*Logger) Writer() io.Writer
pkg math/bits, func Add(uint, uint, uint) (uint, uint)
pkg math/bits, func Add32(uint32, uint32, uint32) (uint32, uint32)
pkg math/bits, func Add64(uint64, uint64, uint64) (uint64, uint64)
pkg math/bits, func Div(uint, uint, uint) (uint, uint)
pkg math/bits, func Div32(uint32, uint32, uint32) (uint32, uint32)
pkg math/bits, func Div64(uint64, uint64, uint64) (uint64, uint64)
pkg math/bits, func Mul(uint, uint) (uint, uint)
pkg math/bits, func Mul32(uint32, uint32) (uint32, uint32)
pkg math/bits, func Mul64(uint64, uint64) (uint64, uint64)
pkg math/bits, func Sub(uint, uint, uint) (uint, uint)
pkg math/bits, func Sub32(uint32, uint32, uint32) (uint32, uint32)
pkg math/bits, func Sub64(uint64, uint64, uint64) (uint64, uint64)
pkg net/http, const StatusTooEarly = 425
pkg net/http, const StatusTooEarly ideal-int
pkg net/http, method (*Client) CloseIdleConnections()
pkg os, const ModeType = 2401763328
pkg os, func UserHomeDir() (string, error)
pkg os, method (*File) SyscallConn() (syscall.RawConn, error)
pkg os, method (*ProcessState) ExitCode() int
pkg os/exec, method (ExitError) ExitCode() int
pkg reflect, method (*MapIter) Key() Value
pkg reflect, method (*MapIter) Next() bool
pkg reflect, method (*MapIter) Value() Value
pkg reflect, method (Value) MapRange() *MapIter
pkg reflect, type MapIter struct
pkg runtime/debug, func ReadBuildInfo() (*BuildInfo, bool)
pkg runtime/debug, type BuildInfo struct
pkg runtime/debug, type BuildInfo struct, Deps []*Module
pkg runtime/debug, type BuildInfo struct, Main Module
pkg runtime/debug, type BuildInfo struct, Path string
pkg runtime/debug, type Module struct
pkg runtime/debug, type Module struct, Path string
pkg runtime/debug, type Module struct, Replace *Module
pkg runtime/debug, type Module struct, Sum string
pkg runtime/debug, type Module struct, Version string
pkg strings, func ReplaceAll(string, string, string) string
pkg strings, method (*Builder) Cap() int
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), func Fstatat(int, string, *Stat_t, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), func Mknod(string, uint32, uint64) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Off int64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Pad0 uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Dirent struct, Pad1 uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Atim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Blksize int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Btim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Ctim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Mtim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Padding0 int16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Padding1 int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Stat_t struct, Spare [10]uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), func Fstatat(int, string, *Stat_t, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), func Mknod(string, uint32, uint64) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Off int64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Pad0 uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Dirent struct, Pad1 uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Atim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Blksize int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Btim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ctim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Mtim_ext int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Padding0 int16
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Padding1 int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Spare [10]uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-386-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), func Fstatat(int, string, *Stat_t, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), func Mknod(string, uint32, uint64) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Off int64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Pad0 uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Dirent struct, Pad1 uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Blksize int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Padding0 int16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Padding1 int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Stat_t struct, Spare [10]uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), func Fstatat(int, string, *Stat_t, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), func Mknod(string, uint32, uint64) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Off int64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Pad0 uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Dirent struct, Pad1 uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Blksize int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Padding0 int16
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Padding1 int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Spare [10]uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), func Fstatat(int, string, *Stat_t, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), func Mknod(string, uint32, uint64) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Off int64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Pad0 uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Dirent struct, Pad1 uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Blksize int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Padding0 int16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Padding1 int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Stat_t struct, Spare [10]uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), func Fstatat(int, string, *Stat_t, int) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), func Mknod(string, uint32, uint64) error
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Fileno uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Namlen uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Off int64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Pad0 uint8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Dirent struct, Pad1 uint16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Blksize int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Dev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Gen uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Ino uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Nlink uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Padding0 int16
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Padding1 int32
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Rdev uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Stat_t struct, Spare [10]uint64
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntfromname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Statfs_t struct, Mntonname [1024]int8
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXG = 56
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXG ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXO = 7
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const S_IRWXO ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), const UNIX_PATH_MAX = 108
pkg syscall (windows-386), const UNIX_PATH_MAX ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), func Syscall18(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (windows-386), type RawSockaddrAny struct, Pad [100]int8
pkg syscall (windows-386), type RawSockaddrUnix struct, Family uint16
pkg syscall (windows-386), type RawSockaddrUnix struct, Path [108]int8
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const UNIX_PATH_MAX = 108
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const UNIX_PATH_MAX ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), func Syscall18(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type RawSockaddrAny struct, Pad [100]int8
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type RawSockaddrUnix struct, Family uint16
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type RawSockaddrUnix struct, Path [108]int8
pkg syscall, type RawSockaddrUnix struct

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

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@@ -1,197 +0,0 @@
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 = 52393
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 uint16
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 = 52392
pkg crypto/tls, const TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256 uint16
pkg crypto/tls, func CipherSuiteName(uint16) string
pkg crypto/tls, func CipherSuites() []*CipherSuite
pkg crypto/tls, func InsecureCipherSuites() []*CipherSuite
pkg crypto/tls, method (*CertificateRequestInfo) SupportsCertificate(*Certificate) error
pkg crypto/tls, method (*ClientHelloInfo) SupportsCertificate(*Certificate) error
pkg crypto/tls, type Certificate struct, SupportedSignatureAlgorithms []SignatureScheme
pkg crypto/tls, type CertificateRequestInfo struct, Version uint16
pkg crypto/tls, type CipherSuite struct
pkg crypto/tls, type CipherSuite struct, ID uint16
pkg crypto/tls, type CipherSuite struct, Insecure bool
pkg crypto/tls, type CipherSuite struct, Name string
pkg crypto/tls, type CipherSuite struct, SupportedVersions []uint16
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrAddrBase = 115
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrAddrBase Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrAlignment = 136
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrAlignment Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrBinaryScale = 91
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrBinaryScale Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallAllCalls = 122
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallAllCalls Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallAllSourceCalls = 123
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallAllSourceCalls Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallAllTailCalls = 124
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallAllTailCalls Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallDataLocation = 133
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallDataLocation Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallDataValue = 134
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallDataValue Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallOrigin = 127
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallOrigin Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallPC = 129
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallPC Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallParameter = 128
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallParameter Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallReturnPC = 125
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallReturnPC Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallTailCall = 130
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallTailCall Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallTarget = 131
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallTarget Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallTargetClobbered = 132
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallTargetClobbered Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallValue = 126
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrCallValue Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrConstExpr = 108
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrConstExpr Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDataBitOffset = 107
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDataBitOffset Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDecimalScale = 92
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDecimalScale Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDecimalSign = 94
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDecimalSign Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDefaulted = 139
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDefaulted Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDeleted = 138
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDeleted Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDigitCount = 95
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDigitCount Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDwoName = 118
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrDwoName Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrElemental = 102
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrElemental Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrEndianity = 101
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrEndianity Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrEnumClass = 109
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrEnumClass Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrExplicit = 99
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrExplicit Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrExportSymbols = 137
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrExportSymbols Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrLinkageName = 110
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrLinkageName Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrLoclistsBase = 140
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrLoclistsBase Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrMacros = 121
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrMacros Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrMainSubprogram = 106
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrMainSubprogram Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrMutable = 97
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrMutable Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrNoreturn = 135
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrNoreturn Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrObjectPointer = 100
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrObjectPointer Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrPictureString = 96
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrPictureString Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrPure = 103
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrPure Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRank = 113
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRank Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRecursive = 104
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRecursive Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrReference = 119
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrReference Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRnglistsBase = 116
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRnglistsBase Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRvalueReference = 120
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrRvalueReference Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrSignature = 105
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrSignature Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrSmall = 93
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrSmall Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrStrOffsetsBase = 114
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrStrOffsetsBase Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrStringLengthBitSize = 111
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrStringLengthBitSize Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrStringLengthByteSize = 112
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrStringLengthByteSize Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrThreadsScaled = 98
pkg debug/dwarf, const AttrThreadsScaled Attr
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassAddrPtr = 15
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassAddrPtr Class
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassLocList = 16
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassLocList Class
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassRngList = 17
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassRngList Class
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassRngListsPtr = 18
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassRngListsPtr Class
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassStrOffsetsPtr = 19
pkg debug/dwarf, const ClassStrOffsetsPtr Class
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagAtomicType = 71
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagAtomicType Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagCallSite = 72
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagCallSite Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagCallSiteParameter = 73
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagCallSiteParameter Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagCoarrayType = 68
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagCoarrayType Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagDynamicType = 70
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagDynamicType Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagGenericSubrange = 69
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagGenericSubrange Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagImmutableType = 75
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagImmutableType Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagSkeletonUnit = 74
pkg debug/dwarf, const TagSkeletonUnit Tag
pkg debug/dwarf, method (*Data) AddSection(string, []uint8) error
pkg debug/dwarf, method (*LineReader) Files() []*LineFile
pkg debug/dwarf, method (*Reader) ByteOrder() binary.ByteOrder
pkg encoding/asn1, const TagBMPString = 30
pkg encoding/asn1, const TagBMPString ideal-int
pkg encoding/json, method (*Decoder) InputOffset() int64
pkg go/build, type Context struct, Dir string
pkg go/doc, func NewFromFiles(*token.FileSet, []*ast.File, string, ...interface{}) (*Package, error)
pkg go/doc, type Example struct, Suffix string
pkg go/doc, type Func struct, Examples []*Example
pkg go/doc, type Package struct, Examples []*Example
pkg go/doc, type Type struct, Examples []*Example
pkg hash/maphash, func MakeSeed() Seed
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) BlockSize() int
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) Reset()
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) Seed() Seed
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) SetSeed(Seed)
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) Size() int
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) Sum([]uint8) []uint8
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) Sum64() uint64
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) Write([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) WriteByte(uint8) error
pkg hash/maphash, method (*Hash) WriteString(string) (int, error)
pkg hash/maphash, type Hash struct
pkg hash/maphash, type Seed struct
pkg log, const Lmsgprefix = 64
pkg log, const Lmsgprefix ideal-int
pkg math, func FMA(float64, float64, float64) float64
pkg math/bits, func Rem(uint, uint, uint) uint
pkg math/bits, func Rem32(uint32, uint32, uint32) uint32
pkg math/bits, func Rem64(uint64, uint64, uint64) uint64
pkg mime/multipart, method (*Reader) NextRawPart() (*Part, error)
pkg net/http, method (Header) Values(string) []string
pkg net/http, type Transport struct, DialTLSContext func(context.Context, string, string) (net.Conn, error)
pkg net/http/httptest, type Server struct, EnableHTTP2 bool
pkg net/textproto, method (MIMEHeader) Values(string) []string
pkg strconv, method (*NumError) Unwrap() error
pkg syscall (windows-386), const CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT = 2
pkg syscall (windows-386), const CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), const CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT = 5
pkg syscall (windows-386), const CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), const CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT = 6
pkg syscall (windows-386), const CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT = 2
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT = 5
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT = 6
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), const CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT ideal-int
pkg testing, method (*B) Cleanup(func())
pkg testing, method (*T) Cleanup(func())
pkg testing, type TB interface, Cleanup(func())
pkg unicode, const Version = "12.0.0"
pkg unicode, var Elymaic *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Nandinagari *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Nyiakeng_Puachue_Hmong *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Wancho *RangeTable

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@@ -1,130 +0,0 @@
pkg bufio, var ErrBadReadCount error
pkg crypto, method (Hash) String() string
pkg crypto/ecdsa, func SignASN1(io.Reader, *PrivateKey, []uint8) ([]uint8, error)
pkg crypto/ecdsa, func VerifyASN1(*PublicKey, []uint8, []uint8) bool
pkg crypto/ecdsa, method (*PrivateKey) Equal(crypto.PrivateKey) bool
pkg crypto/ecdsa, method (*PublicKey) Equal(crypto.PublicKey) bool
pkg crypto/ed25519, method (PrivateKey) Equal(crypto.PrivateKey) bool
pkg crypto/ed25519, method (PublicKey) Equal(crypto.PublicKey) bool
pkg crypto/elliptic, func MarshalCompressed(Curve, *big.Int, *big.Int) []uint8
pkg crypto/elliptic, func UnmarshalCompressed(Curve, []uint8) (*big.Int, *big.Int)
pkg crypto/rsa, method (*PrivateKey) Equal(crypto.PrivateKey) bool
pkg crypto/rsa, method (*PublicKey) Equal(crypto.PublicKey) bool
pkg crypto/tls, method (*Dialer) Dial(string, string) (net.Conn, error)
pkg crypto/tls, method (*Dialer) DialContext(context.Context, string, string) (net.Conn, error)
pkg crypto/tls, method (ClientAuthType) String() string
pkg crypto/tls, method (CurveID) String() string
pkg crypto/tls, method (SignatureScheme) String() string
pkg crypto/tls, type Config struct, VerifyConnection func(ConnectionState) error
pkg crypto/tls, type Dialer struct
pkg crypto/tls, type Dialer struct, Config *Config
pkg crypto/tls, type Dialer struct, NetDialer *net.Dialer
pkg crypto/x509, func CreateRevocationList(io.Reader, *RevocationList, *Certificate, crypto.Signer) ([]uint8, error)
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct, ExtraExtensions []pkix.Extension
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct, NextUpdate time.Time
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct, Number *big.Int
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct, RevokedCertificates []pkix.RevokedCertificate
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct, SignatureAlgorithm SignatureAlgorithm
pkg crypto/x509, type RevocationList struct, ThisUpdate time.Time
pkg database/sql, method (*DB) SetConnMaxIdleTime(time.Duration)
pkg database/sql, method (*Row) Err() error
pkg database/sql, type DBStats struct, MaxIdleTimeClosed int64
pkg database/sql/driver, type Validator interface { IsValid }
pkg database/sql/driver, type Validator interface, IsValid() bool
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_APPCONTAINER = 4096
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_APPCONTAINER ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_DYNAMIC_BASE = 64
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_DYNAMIC_BASE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_FORCE_INTEGRITY = 128
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_FORCE_INTEGRITY ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_GUARD_CF = 16384
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_GUARD_CF ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_HIGH_ENTROPY_VA = 32
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_HIGH_ENTROPY_VA ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NO_BIND = 2048
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NO_BIND ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NO_ISOLATION = 512
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NO_ISOLATION ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NO_SEH = 1024
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NO_SEH ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NX_COMPAT = 256
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_NX_COMPAT ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_TERMINAL_SERVER_AWARE = 32768
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_TERMINAL_SERVER_AWARE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_WDM_DRIVER = 8192
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_WDM_DRIVER ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_32BIT_MACHINE = 256
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_32BIT_MACHINE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_AGGRESIVE_WS_TRIM = 16
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_AGGRESIVE_WS_TRIM ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_BYTES_REVERSED_HI = 32768
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_BYTES_REVERSED_HI ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_BYTES_REVERSED_LO = 128
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_BYTES_REVERSED_LO ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_DEBUG_STRIPPED = 512
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_DEBUG_STRIPPED ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_DLL = 8192
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_DLL ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_EXECUTABLE_IMAGE = 2
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_EXECUTABLE_IMAGE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE = 32
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_LINE_NUMS_STRIPPED = 4
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_LINE_NUMS_STRIPPED ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_LOCAL_SYMS_STRIPPED = 8
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_LOCAL_SYMS_STRIPPED ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_NET_RUN_FROM_SWAP = 2048
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_NET_RUN_FROM_SWAP ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_RELOCS_STRIPPED = 1
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_RELOCS_STRIPPED ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_REMOVABLE_RUN_FROM_SWAP = 1024
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_REMOVABLE_RUN_FROM_SWAP ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_SYSTEM = 4096
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_SYSTEM ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_UP_SYSTEM_ONLY = 16384
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_FILE_UP_SYSTEM_ONLY ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_APPLICATION = 10
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_APPLICATION ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_BOOT_SERVICE_DRIVER = 11
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_BOOT_SERVICE_DRIVER ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_ROM = 13
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_ROM ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_RUNTIME_DRIVER = 12
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_EFI_RUNTIME_DRIVER ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_NATIVE = 1
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_NATIVE ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_NATIVE_WINDOWS = 8
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_NATIVE_WINDOWS ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_OS2_CUI = 5
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_OS2_CUI ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_POSIX_CUI = 7
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_POSIX_CUI ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_UNKNOWN = 0
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_UNKNOWN ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_BOOT_APPLICATION = 16
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_BOOT_APPLICATION ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_CE_GUI = 9
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_CE_GUI ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_CUI = 3
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_CUI ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI = 2
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI ideal-int
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_XBOX = 14
pkg debug/pe, const IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_XBOX ideal-int
pkg math/big, method (*Int) FillBytes([]uint8) []uint8
pkg net, method (*Resolver) LookupIP(context.Context, string, string) ([]IP, error)
pkg net/url, method (*URL) EscapedFragment() string
pkg net/url, method (*URL) Redacted() string
pkg net/url, type URL struct, RawFragment string
pkg os, method (*File) ReadFrom(io.Reader) (int64, error)
pkg os, var ErrDeadlineExceeded error
pkg regexp, method (*Regexp) SubexpIndex(string) int
pkg strconv, func FormatComplex(complex128, uint8, int, int) string
pkg strconv, func ParseComplex(string, int) (complex128, error)
pkg sync, method (*Map) LoadAndDelete(interface{}) (interface{}, bool)
pkg testing, method (*B) TempDir() string
pkg testing, method (*T) Deadline() (time.Time, bool)
pkg testing, method (*T) TempDir() string
pkg testing, type TB interface, TempDir() string
pkg time, method (*Ticker) Reset(Duration)

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@@ -1,501 +0,0 @@
pkg archive/zip, method (*ReadCloser) Open(string) (fs.File, error)
pkg archive/zip, method (*Reader) Open(string) (fs.File, error)
pkg crypto/x509, method (SystemRootsError) Unwrap() error
pkg debug/elf, const DT_ADDRRNGHI = 1879047935
pkg debug/elf, const DT_ADDRRNGHI DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_ADDRRNGLO = 1879047680
pkg debug/elf, const DT_ADDRRNGLO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_AUDIT = 1879047932
pkg debug/elf, const DT_AUDIT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_AUXILIARY = 2147483645
pkg debug/elf, const DT_AUXILIARY DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_CHECKSUM = 1879047672
pkg debug/elf, const DT_CHECKSUM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_CONFIG = 1879047930
pkg debug/elf, const DT_CONFIG DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_DEPAUDIT = 1879047931
pkg debug/elf, const DT_DEPAUDIT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_FEATURE = 1879047676
pkg debug/elf, const DT_FEATURE DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_FILTER = 2147483647
pkg debug/elf, const DT_FILTER DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_FLAGS_1 = 1879048187
pkg debug/elf, const DT_FLAGS_1 DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_CONFLICT = 1879047928
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_CONFLICT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_CONFLICTSZ = 1879047670
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_CONFLICTSZ DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_HASH = 1879047925
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_HASH DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_LIBLIST = 1879047929
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_LIBLIST DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_LIBLISTSZ = 1879047671
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_LIBLISTSZ DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_PRELINKED = 1879047669
pkg debug/elf, const DT_GNU_PRELINKED DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_AUX_DYNAMIC = 1879048241
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_AUX_DYNAMIC DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_BASE_ADDRESS = 1879048198
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_BASE_ADDRESS DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_COMPACT_SIZE = 1879048239
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_COMPACT_SIZE DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_CONFLICT = 1879048200
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_CONFLICT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_CONFLICTNO = 1879048203
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_CONFLICTNO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_CXX_FLAGS = 1879048226
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_CXX_FLAGS DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASS = 1879048215
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASS DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASSSYM = 1879048224
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASSSYM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASSSYM_NO = 1879048225
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASSSYM_NO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASS_NO = 1879048216
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_CLASS_NO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_INSTANCE = 1879048217
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_INSTANCE DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_INSTANCE_NO = 1879048218
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_INSTANCE_NO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_RELOC = 1879048219
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_RELOC DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_RELOC_NO = 1879048220
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_RELOC_NO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_SYM = 1879048221
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_SYM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_SYM_NO = 1879048222
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DELTA_SYM_NO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DYNSTR_ALIGN = 1879048235
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_DYNSTR_ALIGN DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_FLAGS = 1879048197
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_FLAGS DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_GOTSYM = 1879048211
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_GOTSYM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_GP_VALUE = 1879048240
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_GP_VALUE DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_HIDDEN_GOTIDX = 1879048231
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_HIDDEN_GOTIDX DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_HIPAGENO = 1879048212
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_HIPAGENO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_ICHECKSUM = 1879048195
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_ICHECKSUM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_INTERFACE = 1879048234
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_INTERFACE DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_INTERFACE_SIZE = 1879048236
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_INTERFACE_SIZE DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_IVERSION = 1879048196
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_IVERSION DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LIBLIST = 1879048201
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LIBLIST DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LIBLISTNO = 1879048208
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LIBLISTNO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LOCALPAGE_GOTIDX = 1879048229
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LOCALPAGE_GOTIDX DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LOCAL_GOTIDX = 1879048230
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LOCAL_GOTIDX DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LOCAL_GOTNO = 1879048202
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_LOCAL_GOTNO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_MSYM = 1879048199
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_MSYM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_OPTIONS = 1879048233
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_OPTIONS DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PERF_SUFFIX = 1879048238
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PERF_SUFFIX DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PIXIE_INIT = 1879048227
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PIXIE_INIT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PLTGOT = 1879048242
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PLTGOT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PROTECTED_GOTIDX = 1879048232
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_PROTECTED_GOTIDX DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP = 1879048214
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP_REL = 1879048245
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP_REL DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_TEXT_RESOLVE_ADDR = 1879048237
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_TEXT_RESOLVE_ADDR DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_VERSION = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RLD_VERSION DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RWPLT = 1879048244
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_RWPLT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_SYMBOL_LIB = 1879048228
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_SYMBOL_LIB DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_SYMTABNO = 1879048209
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_SYMTABNO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_TIME_STAMP = 1879048194
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_TIME_STAMP DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_UNREFEXTNO = 1879048210
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MIPS_UNREFEXTNO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MOVEENT = 1879047674
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MOVEENT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MOVESZ = 1879047675
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MOVESZ DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MOVETAB = 1879047934
pkg debug/elf, const DT_MOVETAB DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PLTPAD = 1879047933
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PLTPAD DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PLTPADSZ = 1879047673
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PLTPADSZ DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_POSFLAG_1 = 1879047677
pkg debug/elf, const DT_POSFLAG_1 DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_GLINK = 1879048192
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_GLINK DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_OPD = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_OPD DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_OPDSZ = 1879048194
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_OPDSZ DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_OPT = 1879048195
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC64_OPT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC_GOT = 1879048192
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC_GOT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC_OPT = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const DT_PPC_OPT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_RELACOUNT = 1879048185
pkg debug/elf, const DT_RELACOUNT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_RELCOUNT = 1879048186
pkg debug/elf, const DT_RELCOUNT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SPARC_REGISTER = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SPARC_REGISTER DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMINENT = 1879047679
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMINENT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMINFO = 1879047935
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMINFO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMINSZ = 1879047678
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMINSZ DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMTAB_SHNDX = 34
pkg debug/elf, const DT_SYMTAB_SHNDX DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_TLSDESC_GOT = 1879047927
pkg debug/elf, const DT_TLSDESC_GOT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_TLSDESC_PLT = 1879047926
pkg debug/elf, const DT_TLSDESC_PLT DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_USED = 2147483646
pkg debug/elf, const DT_USED DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VALRNGHI = 1879047679
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VALRNGHI DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VALRNGLO = 1879047424
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VALRNGLO DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VERDEF = 1879048188
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VERDEF DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VERDEFNUM = 1879048189
pkg debug/elf, const DT_VERDEFNUM DynTag
pkg debug/elf, const PT_AARCH64_ARCHEXT = 1879048192
pkg debug/elf, const PT_AARCH64_ARCHEXT ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_AARCH64_UNWIND = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const PT_AARCH64_UNWIND ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_ARM_ARCHEXT = 1879048192
pkg debug/elf, const PT_ARM_ARCHEXT ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_ARM_EXIDX = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const PT_ARM_EXIDX ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_EH_FRAME = 1685382480
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_EH_FRAME ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_MBIND_HI = 1685386580
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_MBIND_HI ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_MBIND_LO = 1685382485
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_MBIND_LO ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_PROPERTY = 1685382483
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_PROPERTY ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_RELRO = 1685382482
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_RELRO ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_STACK = 1685382481
pkg debug/elf, const PT_GNU_STACK ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS = 1879048195
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_OPTIONS = 1879048194
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_OPTIONS ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_REGINFO = 1879048192
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_REGINFO ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_RTPROC = 1879048193
pkg debug/elf, const PT_MIPS_RTPROC ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_OPENBSD_BOOTDATA = 1705253862
pkg debug/elf, const PT_OPENBSD_BOOTDATA ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_OPENBSD_RANDOMIZE = 1705237478
pkg debug/elf, const PT_OPENBSD_RANDOMIZE ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_OPENBSD_WXNEEDED = 1705237479
pkg debug/elf, const PT_OPENBSD_WXNEEDED ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_PAX_FLAGS = 1694766464
pkg debug/elf, const PT_PAX_FLAGS ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_S390_PGSTE = 1879048192
pkg debug/elf, const PT_S390_PGSTE ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_SUNWSTACK = 1879048187
pkg debug/elf, const PT_SUNWSTACK ProgType
pkg debug/elf, const PT_SUNW_EH_FRAME = 1685382480
pkg debug/elf, const PT_SUNW_EH_FRAME ProgType
pkg embed, method (FS) Open(string) (fs.File, error)
pkg embed, method (FS) ReadDir(string) ([]fs.DirEntry, error)
pkg embed, method (FS) ReadFile(string) ([]uint8, error)
pkg embed, type FS struct
pkg flag, func Func(string, string, func(string) error)
pkg flag, method (*FlagSet) Func(string, string, func(string) error)
pkg go/build, type Package struct, EmbedPatterns []string
pkg go/build, type Package struct, EmbedPatternPos map[string][]token.Position
pkg go/build, type Package struct, IgnoredOtherFiles []string
pkg go/build, type Package struct, TestEmbedPatterns []string
pkg go/build, type Package struct, TestEmbedPatternPos map[string][]token.Position
pkg go/build, type Package struct, XTestEmbedPatterns []string
pkg go/build, type Package struct, XTestEmbedPatternPos map[string][]token.Position
pkg go/build/constraint, func IsGoBuild(string) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, func IsPlusBuild(string) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, func Parse(string) (Expr, error)
pkg go/build/constraint, func PlusBuildLines(Expr) ([]string, error)
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*AndExpr) Eval(func(string) bool) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*AndExpr) String() string
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*NotExpr) Eval(func(string) bool) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*NotExpr) String() string
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*OrExpr) Eval(func(string) bool) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*OrExpr) String() string
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*SyntaxError) Error() string
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*TagExpr) Eval(func(string) bool) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, method (*TagExpr) String() string
pkg go/build/constraint, type AndExpr struct
pkg go/build/constraint, type AndExpr struct, X Expr
pkg go/build/constraint, type AndExpr struct, Y Expr
pkg go/build/constraint, type Expr interface, Eval(func(string) bool) bool
pkg go/build/constraint, type Expr interface, String() string
pkg go/build/constraint, type Expr interface, unexported methods
pkg go/build/constraint, type NotExpr struct
pkg go/build/constraint, type NotExpr struct, X Expr
pkg go/build/constraint, type OrExpr struct
pkg go/build/constraint, type OrExpr struct, X Expr
pkg go/build/constraint, type OrExpr struct, Y Expr
pkg go/build/constraint, type SyntaxError struct
pkg go/build/constraint, type SyntaxError struct, Err string
pkg go/build/constraint, type SyntaxError struct, Offset int
pkg go/build/constraint, type TagExpr struct
pkg go/build/constraint, type TagExpr struct, Tag string
pkg html/template, func ParseFS(fs.FS, ...string) (*Template, error)
pkg html/template, method (*Template) ParseFS(fs.FS, ...string) (*Template, error)
pkg io, func NopCloser(Reader) ReadCloser
pkg io, func ReadAll(Reader) ([]uint8, error)
pkg io, type ReadSeekCloser interface { Close, Read, Seek }
pkg io, type ReadSeekCloser interface, Close() error
pkg io, type ReadSeekCloser interface, Read([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg io, type ReadSeekCloser interface, Seek(int64, int) (int64, error)
pkg io, var Discard Writer
pkg io/fs, const ModeAppend = 1073741824
pkg io/fs, const ModeAppend FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeCharDevice = 2097152
pkg io/fs, const ModeCharDevice FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeDevice = 67108864
pkg io/fs, const ModeDevice FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeDir = 2147483648
pkg io/fs, const ModeDir FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeExclusive = 536870912
pkg io/fs, const ModeExclusive FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeIrregular = 524288
pkg io/fs, const ModeIrregular FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeNamedPipe = 33554432
pkg io/fs, const ModeNamedPipe FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModePerm = 511
pkg io/fs, const ModePerm FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeSetgid = 4194304
pkg io/fs, const ModeSetgid FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeSetuid = 8388608
pkg io/fs, const ModeSetuid FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeSocket = 16777216
pkg io/fs, const ModeSocket FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeSticky = 1048576
pkg io/fs, const ModeSticky FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeSymlink = 134217728
pkg io/fs, const ModeSymlink FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeTemporary = 268435456
pkg io/fs, const ModeTemporary FileMode
pkg io/fs, const ModeType = 2401763328
pkg io/fs, const ModeType FileMode
pkg io/fs, func Glob(FS, string) ([]string, error)
pkg io/fs, func ReadDir(FS, string) ([]DirEntry, error)
pkg io/fs, func ReadFile(FS, string) ([]uint8, error)
pkg io/fs, func Stat(FS, string) (FileInfo, error)
pkg io/fs, func Sub(FS, string) (FS, error)
pkg io/fs, func ValidPath(string) bool
pkg io/fs, func WalkDir(FS, string, WalkDirFunc) error
pkg io/fs, method (*PathError) Error() string
pkg io/fs, method (*PathError) Timeout() bool
pkg io/fs, method (*PathError) Unwrap() error
pkg io/fs, method (FileMode) IsDir() bool
pkg io/fs, method (FileMode) IsRegular() bool
pkg io/fs, method (FileMode) Perm() FileMode
pkg io/fs, method (FileMode) String() string
pkg io/fs, method (FileMode) Type() FileMode
pkg io/fs, type DirEntry interface { Info, IsDir, Name, Type }
pkg io/fs, type DirEntry interface, Info() (FileInfo, error)
pkg io/fs, type DirEntry interface, IsDir() bool
pkg io/fs, type DirEntry interface, Name() string
pkg io/fs, type DirEntry interface, Type() FileMode
pkg io/fs, type FS interface { Open }
pkg io/fs, type FS interface, Open(string) (File, error)
pkg io/fs, type File interface { Close, Read, Stat }
pkg io/fs, type File interface, Close() error
pkg io/fs, type File interface, Read([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg io/fs, type File interface, Stat() (FileInfo, error)
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface { IsDir, ModTime, Mode, Name, Size, Sys }
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface, IsDir() bool
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface, ModTime() time.Time
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface, Mode() FileMode
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface, Name() string
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface, Size() int64
pkg io/fs, type FileInfo interface, Sys() interface{}
pkg io/fs, type FileMode uint32
pkg io/fs, type GlobFS interface { Glob, Open }
pkg io/fs, type GlobFS interface, Glob(string) ([]string, error)
pkg io/fs, type GlobFS interface, Open(string) (File, error)
pkg io/fs, type PathError struct
pkg io/fs, type PathError struct, Err error
pkg io/fs, type PathError struct, Op string
pkg io/fs, type PathError struct, Path string
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFS interface { Open, ReadDir }
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFS interface, Open(string) (File, error)
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFS interface, ReadDir(string) ([]DirEntry, error)
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFile interface { Close, Read, ReadDir, Stat }
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFile interface, Close() error
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFile interface, Read([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFile interface, ReadDir(int) ([]DirEntry, error)
pkg io/fs, type ReadDirFile interface, Stat() (FileInfo, error)
pkg io/fs, type ReadFileFS interface { Open, ReadFile }
pkg io/fs, type ReadFileFS interface, Open(string) (File, error)
pkg io/fs, type ReadFileFS interface, ReadFile(string) ([]uint8, error)
pkg io/fs, type StatFS interface { Open, Stat }
pkg io/fs, type StatFS interface, Open(string) (File, error)
pkg io/fs, type StatFS interface, Stat(string) (FileInfo, error)
pkg io/fs, type SubFS interface { Open, Sub }
pkg io/fs, type SubFS interface, Open(string) (File, error)
pkg io/fs, type SubFS interface, Sub(string) (FS, error)
pkg io/fs, type WalkDirFunc func(string, DirEntry, error) error
pkg io/fs, var ErrClosed error
pkg io/fs, var ErrExist error
pkg io/fs, var ErrInvalid error
pkg io/fs, var ErrNotExist error
pkg io/fs, var ErrPermission error
pkg io/fs, var SkipDir error
pkg log, func Default() *Logger
pkg net, var ErrClosed error
pkg net/http, func FS(fs.FS) FileSystem
pkg net/http, type Transport struct, GetProxyConnectHeader func(context.Context, *url.URL, string) (Header, error)
pkg os, const ModeAppend fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeCharDevice fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeDevice fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeDir fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeExclusive fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeIrregular fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeNamedPipe fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModePerm fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSetgid fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSetuid fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSocket fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSticky fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeSymlink fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeTemporary fs.FileMode
pkg os, const ModeType fs.FileMode
pkg os, func Chmod(string, fs.FileMode) error
pkg os, func CreateTemp(string, string) (*File, error)
pkg os, func DirFS(string) fs.FS
pkg os, func Lstat(string) (fs.FileInfo, error)
pkg os, func Mkdir(string, fs.FileMode) error
pkg os, func MkdirAll(string, fs.FileMode) error
pkg os, func MkdirTemp(string, string) (string, error)
pkg os, func OpenFile(string, int, fs.FileMode) (*File, error)
pkg os, func ReadDir(string) ([]fs.DirEntry, error)
pkg os, func ReadFile(string) ([]uint8, error)
pkg os, func SameFile(fs.FileInfo, fs.FileInfo) bool
pkg os, func Stat(string) (fs.FileInfo, error)
pkg os, func WriteFile(string, []uint8, fs.FileMode) error
pkg os, method (*File) Chmod(fs.FileMode) error
pkg os, method (*File) ReadDir(int) ([]fs.DirEntry, error)
pkg os, method (*File) Readdir(int) ([]fs.FileInfo, error)
pkg os, method (*File) Stat() (fs.FileInfo, error)
pkg os, type DirEntry = fs.DirEntry
pkg os, type FileInfo = fs.FileInfo
pkg os, type FileMode = fs.FileMode
pkg os, type PathError = fs.PathError
pkg os, var ErrProcessDone error
pkg os/signal, func NotifyContext(context.Context, ...os.Signal) (context.Context, context.CancelFunc)
pkg path/filepath, func WalkDir(string, fs.WalkDirFunc) error
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindBad = 0
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindBad ValueKind
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindFloat64 = 2
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindFloat64 ValueKind
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindFloat64Histogram = 3
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindFloat64Histogram ValueKind
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindUint64 = 1
pkg runtime/metrics, const KindUint64 ValueKind
pkg runtime/metrics, func All() []Description
pkg runtime/metrics, func Read([]Sample)
pkg runtime/metrics, method (Value) Float64() float64
pkg runtime/metrics, method (Value) Float64Histogram() *Float64Histogram
pkg runtime/metrics, method (Value) Kind() ValueKind
pkg runtime/metrics, method (Value) Uint64() uint64
pkg runtime/metrics, type Description struct
pkg runtime/metrics, type Description struct, Cumulative bool
pkg runtime/metrics, type Description struct, Description string
pkg runtime/metrics, type Description struct, Kind ValueKind
pkg runtime/metrics, type Description struct, Name string
pkg runtime/metrics, type Float64Histogram struct
pkg runtime/metrics, type Float64Histogram struct, Buckets []float64
pkg runtime/metrics, type Float64Histogram struct, Counts []uint64
pkg runtime/metrics, type Sample struct
pkg runtime/metrics, type Sample struct, Name string
pkg runtime/metrics, type Sample struct, Value Value
pkg runtime/metrics, type Value struct
pkg runtime/metrics, type ValueKind int
pkg syscall (linux-386), func AllThreadsSyscall(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-386), func AllThreadsSyscall6(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-386), func Setegid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-386), func Seteuid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-386-cgo), func AllThreadsSyscall(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-386-cgo), func AllThreadsSyscall6(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-386-cgo), func Setegid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-386-cgo), func Seteuid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-amd64), func AllThreadsSyscall(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-amd64), func AllThreadsSyscall6(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-amd64), func Setegid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-amd64), func Seteuid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-amd64-cgo), func AllThreadsSyscall(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-amd64-cgo), func AllThreadsSyscall6(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-amd64-cgo), func Setegid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-amd64-cgo), func Seteuid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-arm), func AllThreadsSyscall(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-arm), func AllThreadsSyscall6(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-arm), func Setegid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-arm), func Seteuid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-arm-cgo), func AllThreadsSyscall(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-arm-cgo), func AllThreadsSyscall6(uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr, uintptr) (uintptr, uintptr, Errno)
pkg syscall (linux-arm-cgo), func Setegid(int) error
pkg syscall (linux-arm-cgo), func Seteuid(int) error
pkg syscall (windows-386), method (*DLLError) Unwrap() error
pkg syscall (windows-386), type SysProcAttr struct, NoInheritHandles bool
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), method (*DLLError) Unwrap() error
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type SysProcAttr struct, NoInheritHandles bool
pkg testing/fstest, func TestFS(fs.FS, ...string) error
pkg testing/fstest, method (MapFS) Glob(string) ([]string, error)
pkg testing/fstest, method (MapFS) Open(string) (fs.File, error)
pkg testing/fstest, method (MapFS) ReadDir(string) ([]fs.DirEntry, error)
pkg testing/fstest, method (MapFS) ReadFile(string) ([]uint8, error)
pkg testing/fstest, method (MapFS) Stat(string) (fs.FileInfo, error)
pkg testing/fstest, method (MapFS) Sub(string) (fs.FS, error)
pkg testing/fstest, type MapFS map[string]*MapFile
pkg testing/fstest, type MapFile struct
pkg testing/fstest, type MapFile struct, Data []uint8
pkg testing/fstest, type MapFile struct, ModTime time.Time
pkg testing/fstest, type MapFile struct, Mode fs.FileMode
pkg testing/fstest, type MapFile struct, Sys interface{}
pkg testing/iotest, func ErrReader(error) io.Reader
pkg testing/iotest, func TestReader(io.Reader, []uint8) error
pkg text/template, func ParseFS(fs.FS, ...string) (*Template, error)
pkg text/template, method (*Template) ParseFS(fs.FS, ...string) (*Template, error)
pkg text/template/parse, const NodeComment = 20
pkg text/template/parse, const NodeComment NodeType
pkg text/template/parse, const ParseComments = 1
pkg text/template/parse, const ParseComments Mode
pkg text/template/parse, method (*CommentNode) Copy() Node
pkg text/template/parse, method (*CommentNode) String() string
pkg text/template/parse, method (CommentNode) Position() Pos
pkg text/template/parse, method (CommentNode) Type() NodeType
pkg text/template/parse, type CommentNode struct
pkg text/template/parse, type CommentNode struct, Text string
pkg text/template/parse, type CommentNode struct, embedded NodeType
pkg text/template/parse, type CommentNode struct, embedded Pos
pkg text/template/parse, type Mode uint
pkg text/template/parse, type Tree struct, Mode Mode
pkg unicode, const Version = "13.0.0"
pkg unicode, var Chorasmian *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Dives_Akuru *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Khitan_Small_Script *RangeTable
pkg unicode, var Yezidi *RangeTable

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@@ -1,195 +0,0 @@
pkg archive/zip, method (*File) OpenRaw() (io.Reader, error)
pkg archive/zip, method (*Writer) Copy(*File) error
pkg archive/zip, method (*Writer) CreateRaw(*FileHeader) (io.Writer, error)
pkg compress/lzw, method (*Reader) Close() error
pkg compress/lzw, method (*Reader) Read([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg compress/lzw, method (*Reader) Reset(io.Reader, Order, int)
pkg compress/lzw, method (*Writer) Close() error
pkg compress/lzw, method (*Writer) Reset(io.Writer, Order, int)
pkg compress/lzw, method (*Writer) Write([]uint8) (int, error)
pkg compress/lzw, type Reader struct
pkg compress/lzw, type Writer struct
pkg crypto/tls, method (*CertificateRequestInfo) Context() context.Context
pkg crypto/tls, method (*ClientHelloInfo) Context() context.Context
pkg crypto/tls, method (*Conn) HandshakeContext(context.Context) error
pkg database/sql, method (*NullByte) Scan(interface{}) error
pkg database/sql, method (*NullInt16) Scan(interface{}) error
pkg database/sql, method (NullByte) Value() (driver.Value, error)
pkg database/sql, method (NullInt16) Value() (driver.Value, error)
pkg database/sql, type NullByte struct
pkg database/sql, type NullByte struct, Byte uint8
pkg database/sql, type NullByte struct, Valid bool
pkg database/sql, type NullInt16 struct
pkg database/sql, type NullInt16 struct, Int16 int16
pkg database/sql, type NullInt16 struct, Valid bool
pkg debug/elf, const SHT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS = 1879048234
pkg debug/elf, const SHT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS SectionType
pkg encoding/csv, method (*Reader) FieldPos(int) (int, int)
pkg go/build, type Context struct, ToolTags []string
pkg go/parser, const SkipObjectResolution = 64
pkg go/parser, const SkipObjectResolution Mode
pkg image, method (*Alpha) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*Alpha) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*Alpha16) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*Alpha16) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*CMYK) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*CMYK) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*Gray) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*Gray) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*Gray16) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*Gray16) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*NRGBA) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*NRGBA) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*NRGBA64) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*NRGBA64) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*NYCbCrA) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*Paletted) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*Paletted) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*RGBA) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*RGBA) SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg image, method (*Uniform) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (*YCbCr) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, method (Rectangle) RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image, type RGBA64Image interface { At, Bounds, ColorModel, RGBA64At }
pkg image, type RGBA64Image interface, At(int, int) color.Color
pkg image, type RGBA64Image interface, Bounds() Rectangle
pkg image, type RGBA64Image interface, ColorModel() color.Model
pkg image, type RGBA64Image interface, RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface { At, Bounds, ColorModel, RGBA64At, Set, SetRGBA64 }
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface, At(int, int) color.Color
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface, Bounds() image.Rectangle
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface, ColorModel() color.Model
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface, RGBA64At(int, int) color.RGBA64
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface, Set(int, int, color.Color)
pkg image/draw, type RGBA64Image interface, SetRGBA64(int, int, color.RGBA64)
pkg io/fs, func FileInfoToDirEntry(FileInfo) DirEntry
pkg math, const MaxFloat64 = 1.79769e+308 // 179769313486231570814527423731704356798070567525844996598917476803157260780028538760589558632766878171540458953514382464234321326889464182768467546703537516986049910576551282076245490090389328944075868508455133942304583236903222948165808559332123348274797826204144723168738177180919299881250404026184124858368
pkg math, const MaxInt = 9223372036854775807
pkg math, const MaxInt ideal-int
pkg math, const MaxUint = 18446744073709551615
pkg math, const MaxUint ideal-int
pkg math, const MinInt = -9223372036854775808
pkg math, const MinInt ideal-int
pkg math, const SmallestNonzeroFloat32 = 1.4013e-45 // 1/713623846352979940529142984724747568191373312
pkg math, const SmallestNonzeroFloat64 = 4.94066e-324 // 1/202402253307310618352495346718917307049556649764142118356901358027430339567995346891960383701437124495187077864316811911389808737385793476867013399940738509921517424276566361364466907742093216341239767678472745068562007483424692698618103355649159556340810056512358769552333414615230502532186327508646006263307707741093494784
pkg net, method (*ParseError) Temporary() bool
pkg net, method (*ParseError) Timeout() bool
pkg net, method (IP) IsPrivate() bool
pkg net/http, func AllowQuerySemicolons(Handler) Handler
pkg net/url, method (Values) Has(string) bool
pkg reflect, func VisibleFields(Type) []StructField
pkg reflect, method (Method) IsExported() bool
pkg reflect, method (StructField) IsExported() bool
pkg reflect, method (Value) CanConvert(Type) bool
pkg runtime/cgo (darwin-amd64-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (darwin-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (darwin-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (darwin-amd64-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-386-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-386-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-386-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-386-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-amd64-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-amd64-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-arm-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-arm-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-arm-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (freebsd-arm-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-386-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-386-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-386-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-386-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-amd64-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-amd64-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-arm-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-arm-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-arm-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (linux-arm-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-386-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-386-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-386-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-386-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-amd64-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-amd64-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm64-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm64-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm64-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (netbsd-arm64-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-386-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-386-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-386-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-386-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-amd64-cgo), func NewHandle(interface{}) Handle
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Delete()
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-amd64-cgo), method (Handle) Value() interface{}
pkg runtime/cgo (openbsd-amd64-cgo), type Handle uintptr
pkg strconv, func QuotedPrefix(string) (string, error)
pkg sync/atomic, method (*Value) CompareAndSwap(interface{}, interface{}) bool
pkg sync/atomic, method (*Value) Swap(interface{}) interface{}
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-386), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-386-cgo), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-amd64-cgo), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm-cgo), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 = 481
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64-cgo), const SYS_WAIT6 ideal-int
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64-cgo), const WEXITED = 32
pkg syscall (netbsd-arm64-cgo), const WEXITED ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC = 2048
pkg syscall (openbsd-386), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC = 2048
pkg syscall (openbsd-386-cgo), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC = 2048
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC = 2048
pkg syscall (openbsd-amd64-cgo), const MSG_CMSG_CLOEXEC ideal-int
pkg syscall (windows-386), type SysProcAttr struct, AdditionalInheritedHandles []Handle
pkg syscall (windows-386), type SysProcAttr struct, ParentProcess Handle
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type SysProcAttr struct, AdditionalInheritedHandles []Handle
pkg syscall (windows-amd64), type SysProcAttr struct, ParentProcess Handle
pkg testing, method (*B) Setenv(string, string)
pkg testing, method (*T) Setenv(string, string)
pkg testing, type TB interface, Setenv(string, string)
pkg text/template/parse, const SkipFuncCheck = 2
pkg text/template/parse, const SkipFuncCheck Mode
pkg time, const Layout = "01/02 03:04:05PM '06 -0700"
pkg time, const Layout ideal-string
pkg time, func UnixMicro(int64) Time
pkg time, func UnixMilli(int64) Time
pkg time, method (Time) GoString() string
pkg time, method (Time) IsDST() bool
pkg time, method (Time) UnixMicro() int64
pkg time, method (Time) UnixMilli() int64

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branch: dev.typeparams
parent-branch: master

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<!--{
"title": "About the go command"
}-->
<p>The Go distribution includes a command, named
"<code><a href="/cmd/go/">go</a></code>", that
automates the downloading, building, installation, and testing of Go packages
and commands. This document talks about why we wrote a new command, what it
is, what it's not, and how to use it.</p>
<h2>Motivation</h2>
<p>You might have seen early Go talks in which Rob Pike jokes that the idea
for Go arose while waiting for a large Google server to compile. That
really was the motivation for Go: to build a language that worked well
for building the large software that Google writes and runs. It was
clear from the start that such a language must provide a way to
express dependencies between code libraries clearly, hence the package
grouping and the explicit import blocks. It was also clear from the
start that you might want arbitrary syntax for describing the code
being imported; this is why import paths are string literals.</p>
<p>An explicit goal for Go from the beginning was to be able to build Go
code using only the information found in the source itself, not
needing to write a makefile or one of the many modern replacements for
makefiles. If Go needed a configuration file to explain how to build
your program, then Go would have failed.</p>
<p>At first, there was no Go compiler, and the initial development
focused on building one and then building libraries for it. For
expedience, we postponed the automation of building Go code by using
make and writing makefiles. When compiling a single package involved
multiple invocations of the Go compiler, we even used a program to
write the makefiles for us. You can find it if you dig through the
repository history.</p>
<p>The purpose of the new go command is our return to this ideal, that Go
programs should compile without configuration or additional effort on
the part of the developer beyond writing the necessary import
statements.</p>
<h2>Configuration versus convention</h2>
<p>The way to achieve the simplicity of a configuration-free system is to
establish conventions. The system works only to the extent that those conventions
are followed. When we first launched Go, many people published packages that
had to be installed in certain places, under certain names, using certain build
tools, in order to be used. That's understandable: that's the way it works in
most other languages. Over the last few years we consistently reminded people
about the <code>goinstall</code> command
(now replaced by <a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Download_and_install_packages_and_dependencies"><code>go get</code></a>)
and its conventions: first, that the import path is derived in a known way from
the URL of the source code; second, that the place to store the sources in
the local file system is derived in a known way from the import path; third,
that each directory in a source tree corresponds to a single package; and
fourth, that the package is built using only information in the source code.
Today, the vast majority of packages follow these conventions.
The Go ecosystem is simpler and more powerful as a result.</p>
<p>We received many requests to allow a makefile in a package directory to
provide just a little extra configuration beyond what's in the source code.
But that would have introduced new rules. Because we did not accede to such
requests, we were able to write the go command and eliminate our use of make
or any other build system.</p>
<p>It is important to understand that the go command is not a general
build tool. It cannot be configured and it does not attempt to build
anything but Go packages. These are important simplifying
assumptions: they simplify not only the implementation but also, more
important, the use of the tool itself.</p>
<h2>Go's conventions</h2>
<p>The <code>go</code> command requires that code adheres to a few key,
well-established conventions.</p>
<p>First, the import path is derived in an known way from the URL of the
source code. For Bitbucket, GitHub, Google Code, and Launchpad, the
root directory of the repository is identified by the repository's
main URL, without the <code>http://</code> prefix. Subdirectories are named by
adding to that path.
For example, the Go example programs are obtained by running</p>
<pre>
git clone https://github.com/golang/example
</pre>
<p>and thus the import path for the root directory of that repository is
"<code>github.com/golang/example</code>".
The <a href="https://godoc.org/github.com/golang/example/stringutil">stringutil</a>
package is stored in a subdirectory, so its import path is
"<code>github.com/golang/example/stringutil</code>".</p>
<p>These paths are on the long side, but in exchange we get an
automatically managed name space for import paths and the ability for
a tool like the go command to look at an unfamiliar import path and
deduce where to obtain the source code.</p>
<p>Second, the place to store sources in the local file system is derived
in a known way from the import path, specifically
<code>$GOPATH/src/&lt;import-path&gt;</code>.
If unset, <code>$GOPATH</code> defaults to a subdirectory
named <code>go</code> in the user's home directory.
If <code>$GOPATH</code> is set to a list of paths, the go command tries
<code>&lt;dir&gt;/src/&lt;import-path&gt;</code> for each of the directories in
that list.
</p>
<p>Each of those trees contains, by convention, a top-level directory named
"<code>bin</code>", for holding compiled executables, and a top-level directory
named "<code>pkg</code>", for holding compiled packages that can be imported,
and the "<code>src</code>" directory, for holding package source files.
Imposing this structure lets us keep each of these directory trees
self-contained: the compiled form and the sources are always near each
other.</p>
<p>These naming conventions also let us work in the reverse direction,
from a directory name to its import path. This mapping is important
for many of the go command's subcommands, as we'll see below.</p>
<p>Third, each directory in a source tree corresponds to a single
package. By restricting a directory to a single package, we don't have
to create hybrid import paths that specify first the directory and
then the package within that directory. Also, most file management
tools and UIs work on directories as fundamental units. Tying the
fundamental Go unit&mdash;the package&mdash;to file system structure means
that file system tools become Go package tools. Copying, moving, or
deleting a package corresponds to copying, moving, or deleting a
directory.</p>
<p>Fourth, each package is built using only the information present in
the source files. This makes it much more likely that the tool will
be able to adapt to changing build environments and conditions. For
example, if we allowed extra configuration such as compiler flags or
command line recipes, then that configuration would need to be updated
each time the build tools changed; it would also be inherently tied
to the use of a specific tool chain.</p>
<h2>Getting started with the go command</h2>
<p>Finally, a quick tour of how to use the go command.
As mentioned above, the default <code>$GOPATH</code> on Unix is <code>$HOME/go</code>.
We'll store our programs there.
To use a different location, you can set <code>$GOPATH</code>;
see <a href="/doc/code.html">How to Write Go Code</a> for details.
<p>We first add some source code. Suppose we want to use
the indexing library from the codesearch project along with a left-leaning
red-black tree. We can install both with the "<code>go get</code>"
subcommand:</p>
<pre>
$ go get github.com/google/codesearch/index
$ go get github.com/petar/GoLLRB/llrb
$
</pre>
<p>Both of these projects are now downloaded and installed into <code>$HOME/go</code>,
which contains the two directories
<code>src/github.com/google/codesearch/index/</code> and
<code>src/github.com/petar/GoLLRB/llrb/</code>, along with the compiled
packages (in <code>pkg/</code>) for those libraries and their dependencies.</p>
<p>Because we used version control systems (Mercurial and Git) to check
out the sources, the source tree also contains the other files in the
corresponding repositories, such as related packages. The "<code>go list</code>"
subcommand lists the import paths corresponding to its arguments, and
the pattern "<code>./...</code>" means start in the current directory
("<code>./</code>") and find all packages below that directory
("<code>...</code>"):</p>
<pre>
$ cd $HOME/go/src
$ go list ./...
github.com/google/codesearch/cmd/cgrep
github.com/google/codesearch/cmd/cindex
github.com/google/codesearch/cmd/csearch
github.com/google/codesearch/index
github.com/google/codesearch/regexp
github.com/google/codesearch/sparse
github.com/petar/GoLLRB/example
github.com/petar/GoLLRB/llrb
$
</pre>
<p>We can also test those packages:</p>
<pre>
$ go test ./...
? github.com/google/codesearch/cmd/cgrep [no test files]
? github.com/google/codesearch/cmd/cindex [no test files]
? github.com/google/codesearch/cmd/csearch [no test files]
ok github.com/google/codesearch/index 0.203s
ok github.com/google/codesearch/regexp 0.017s
? github.com/google/codesearch/sparse [no test files]
? github.com/petar/GoLLRB/example [no test files]
ok github.com/petar/GoLLRB/llrb 0.231s
$
</pre>
<p>If a go subcommand is invoked with no paths listed, it operates on the
current directory:</p>
<pre>
$ cd github.com/google/codesearch/regexp
$ go list
github.com/google/codesearch/regexp
$ go test -v
=== RUN TestNstateEnc
--- PASS: TestNstateEnc (0.00s)
=== RUN TestMatch
--- PASS: TestMatch (0.00s)
=== RUN TestGrep
--- PASS: TestGrep (0.00s)
PASS
ok github.com/google/codesearch/regexp 0.018s
$ go install
$
</pre>
<p>That "<code>go install</code>" subcommand installs the latest copy of the
package into the pkg directory. Because the go command can analyze the
dependency graph, "<code>go install</code>" also installs any packages that
this package imports but that are out of date, recursively.</p>
<p>Notice that "<code>go install</code>" was able to determine the name of the
import path for the package in the current directory, because of the convention
for directory naming. It would be a little more convenient if we could pick
the name of the directory where we kept source code, and we probably wouldn't
pick such a long name, but that ability would require additional configuration
and complexity in the tool. Typing an extra directory name or two is a small
price to pay for the increased simplicity and power.</p>
<h2>Limitations</h2>
<p>As mentioned above, the go command is not a general-purpose build
tool.
In particular, it does not have any facility for generating Go
source files <em>during</em> a build, although it does provide
<a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Generate_Go_files_by_processing_source"><code>go</code>
<code>generate</code></a>,
which can automate the creation of Go files <em>before</em> the build.
For more advanced build setups, you may need to write a
makefile (or a configuration file for the build tool of your choice)
to run whatever tool creates the Go files and then check those generated source files
into your repository. This is more work for you, the package author,
but it is significantly less work for your users, who can use
"<code>go get</code>" without needing to obtain and build
any additional tools.</p>
<h2>More information</h2>
<p>For more information, read <a href="/doc/code.html">How to Write Go Code</a>
and see the <a href="/cmd/go/">go command documentation</a>.</p>

8
doc/articles/index.html Normal file
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<!--{
"Title": "/doc/articles/"
}-->
<p>
See the <a href="/doc/#articles">Documents page</a> and the
<a href="/blog/index">Blog index</a> for a complete list of Go articles.
</p>

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@@ -0,0 +1,389 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Data Race Detector",
"Template": true
}-->
<h2 id="Introduction">Introduction</h2>
<p>
Data races are among the most common and hardest to debug types of bugs in concurrent systems.
A data race occurs when two goroutines access the same variable concurrently and at least one of the accesses is a write.
See the <a href="/ref/mem/">The Go Memory Model</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
Here is an example of a data race that can lead to crashes and memory corruption:
</p>
<pre>
func main() {
c := make(chan bool)
m := make(map[string]string)
go func() {
m["1"] = "a" // First conflicting access.
c &lt;- true
}()
m["2"] = "b" // Second conflicting access.
&lt;-c
for k, v := range m {
fmt.Println(k, v)
}
}
</pre>
<h2 id="Usage">Usage</h2>
<p>
To help diagnose such bugs, Go includes a built-in data race detector.
To use it, add the <code>-race</code> flag to the go command:
</p>
<pre>
$ go test -race mypkg // to test the package
$ go run -race mysrc.go // to run the source file
$ go build -race mycmd // to build the command
$ go install -race mypkg // to install the package
</pre>
<h2 id="Report_Format">Report Format</h2>
<p>
When the race detector finds a data race in the program, it prints a report.
The report contains stack traces for conflicting accesses, as well as stacks where the involved goroutines were created.
Here is an example:
</p>
<pre>
WARNING: DATA RACE
Read by goroutine 185:
net.(*pollServer).AddFD()
src/net/fd_unix.go:89 +0x398
net.(*pollServer).WaitWrite()
src/net/fd_unix.go:247 +0x45
net.(*netFD).Write()
src/net/fd_unix.go:540 +0x4d4
net.(*conn).Write()
src/net/net.go:129 +0x101
net.func·060()
src/net/timeout_test.go:603 +0xaf
Previous write by goroutine 184:
net.setWriteDeadline()
src/net/sockopt_posix.go:135 +0xdf
net.setDeadline()
src/net/sockopt_posix.go:144 +0x9c
net.(*conn).SetDeadline()
src/net/net.go:161 +0xe3
net.func·061()
src/net/timeout_test.go:616 +0x3ed
Goroutine 185 (running) created at:
net.func·061()
src/net/timeout_test.go:609 +0x288
Goroutine 184 (running) created at:
net.TestProlongTimeout()
src/net/timeout_test.go:618 +0x298
testing.tRunner()
src/testing/testing.go:301 +0xe8
</pre>
<h2 id="Options">Options</h2>
<p>
The <code>GORACE</code> environment variable sets race detector options.
The format is:
</p>
<pre>
GORACE="option1=val1 option2=val2"
</pre>
<p>
The options are:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
<code>log_path</code> (default <code>stderr</code>): The race detector writes
its report to a file named <code>log_path.<em>pid</em></code>.
The special names <code>stdout</code>
and <code>stderr</code> cause reports to be written to standard output and
standard error, respectively.
</li>
<li>
<code>exitcode</code> (default <code>66</code>): The exit status to use when
exiting after a detected race.
</li>
<li>
<code>strip_path_prefix</code> (default <code>""</code>): Strip this prefix
from all reported file paths, to make reports more concise.
</li>
<li>
<code>history_size</code> (default <code>1</code>): The per-goroutine memory
access history is <code>32K * 2**history_size elements</code>.
Increasing this value can avoid a "failed to restore the stack" error in reports, at the
cost of increased memory usage.
</li>
<li>
<code>halt_on_error</code> (default <code>0</code>): Controls whether the program
exits after reporting first data race.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
Example:
</p>
<pre>
$ GORACE="log_path=/tmp/race/report strip_path_prefix=/my/go/sources/" go test -race
</pre>
<h2 id="Excluding_Tests">Excluding Tests</h2>
<p>
When you build with <code>-race</code> flag, the <code>go</code> command defines additional
<a href="/pkg/go/build/#hdr-Build_Constraints">build tag</a> <code>race</code>.
You can use the tag to exclude some code and tests when running the race detector.
Some examples:
</p>
<pre>
// +build !race
package foo
// The test contains a data race. See issue 123.
func TestFoo(t *testing.T) {
// ...
}
// The test fails under the race detector due to timeouts.
func TestBar(t *testing.T) {
// ...
}
// The test takes too long under the race detector.
func TestBaz(t *testing.T) {
// ...
}
</pre>
<h2 id="How_To_Use">How To Use</h2>
<p>
To start, run your tests using the race detector (<code>go test -race</code>).
The race detector only finds races that happen at runtime, so it can't find
races in code paths that are not executed.
If your tests have incomplete coverage,
you may find more races by running a binary built with <code>-race</code> under a realistic
workload.
</p>
<h2 id="Typical_Data_Races">Typical Data Races</h2>
<p>
Here are some typical data races. All of them can be detected with the race detector.
</p>
<h3 id="Race_on_loop_counter">Race on loop counter</h3>
<pre>
func main() {
var wg sync.WaitGroup
wg.Add(5)
for i := 0; i < 5; i++ {
go func() {
fmt.Println(i) // Not the 'i' you are looking for.
wg.Done()
}()
}
wg.Wait()
}
</pre>
<p>
The variable <code>i</code> in the function literal is the same variable used by the loop, so
the read in the goroutine races with the loop increment.
(This program typically prints 55555, not 01234.)
The program can be fixed by making a copy of the variable:
</p>
<pre>
func main() {
var wg sync.WaitGroup
wg.Add(5)
for i := 0; i < 5; i++ {
go func(j int) {
fmt.Println(j) // Good. Read local copy of the loop counter.
wg.Done()
}(i)
}
wg.Wait()
}
</pre>
<h3 id="Accidentally_shared_variable">Accidentally shared variable</h3>
<pre>
// ParallelWrite writes data to file1 and file2, returns the errors.
func ParallelWrite(data []byte) chan error {
res := make(chan error, 2)
f1, err := os.Create("file1")
if err != nil {
res &lt;- err
} else {
go func() {
// This err is shared with the main goroutine,
// so the write races with the write below.
_, err = f1.Write(data)
res &lt;- err
f1.Close()
}()
}
f2, err := os.Create("file2") // The second conflicting write to err.
if err != nil {
res &lt;- err
} else {
go func() {
_, err = f2.Write(data)
res &lt;- err
f2.Close()
}()
}
return res
}
</pre>
<p>
The fix is to introduce new variables in the goroutines (note the use of <code>:=</code>):
</p>
<pre>
...
_, err := f1.Write(data)
...
_, err := f2.Write(data)
...
</pre>
<h3 id="Unprotected_global_variable">Unprotected global variable</h3>
<p>
If the following code is called from several goroutines, it leads to races on the <code>service</code> map.
Concurrent reads and writes of the same map are not safe:
</p>
<pre>
var service map[string]net.Addr
func RegisterService(name string, addr net.Addr) {
service[name] = addr
}
func LookupService(name string) net.Addr {
return service[name]
}
</pre>
<p>
To make the code safe, protect the accesses with a mutex:
</p>
<pre>
var (
service map[string]net.Addr
serviceMu sync.Mutex
)
func RegisterService(name string, addr net.Addr) {
serviceMu.Lock()
defer serviceMu.Unlock()
service[name] = addr
}
func LookupService(name string) net.Addr {
serviceMu.Lock()
defer serviceMu.Unlock()
return service[name]
}
</pre>
<h3 id="Primitive_unprotected_variable">Primitive unprotected variable</h3>
<p>
Data races can happen on variables of primitive types as well (<code>bool</code>, <code>int</code>, <code>int64</code>, etc.),
as in this example:
</p>
<pre>
type Watchdog struct{ last int64 }
func (w *Watchdog) KeepAlive() {
w.last = time.Now().UnixNano() // First conflicting access.
}
func (w *Watchdog) Start() {
go func() {
for {
time.Sleep(time.Second)
// Second conflicting access.
if w.last < time.Now().Add(-10*time.Second).UnixNano() {
fmt.Println("No keepalives for 10 seconds. Dying.")
os.Exit(1)
}
}
}()
}
</pre>
<p>
Even such "innocent" data races can lead to hard-to-debug problems caused by
non-atomicity of the memory accesses,
interference with compiler optimizations,
or reordering issues accessing processor memory .
</p>
<p>
A typical fix for this race is to use a channel or a mutex.
To preserve the lock-free behavior, one can also use the
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/"><code>sync/atomic</code></a> package.
</p>
<pre>
type Watchdog struct{ last int64 }
func (w *Watchdog) KeepAlive() {
atomic.StoreInt64(&amp;w.last, time.Now().UnixNano())
}
func (w *Watchdog) Start() {
go func() {
for {
time.Sleep(time.Second)
if atomic.LoadInt64(&amp;w.last) < time.Now().Add(-10*time.Second).UnixNano() {
fmt.Println("No keepalives for 10 seconds. Dying.")
os.Exit(1)
}
}
}()
}
</pre>
<h2 id="Supported_Systems">Supported Systems</h2>
<p>
The race detector runs on <code>darwin/amd64</code>, <code>freebsd/amd64</code>,
<code>linux/amd64</code>, and <code>windows/amd64</code>.
</p>
<h2 id="Runtime_Overheads">Runtime Overhead</h2>
<p>
The cost of race detection varies by program, but for a typical program, memory
usage may increase by 5-10x and execution time by 2-20x.
</p>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
<h1>Editing {{.Title}}</h1>
<form action="/save/{{.Title}}" method="POST">
<div><textarea name="body" rows="20" cols="80">{{printf "%s" .Body}}</textarea></div>
<div><input type="submit" value="Save"></div>
</form>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,102 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"errors"
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
"regexp"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title, err := getTitle(w, r)
if err != nil {
return
}
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
http.Redirect(w, r, "/edit/"+title, http.StatusFound)
return
}
renderTemplate(w, "view", p)
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title, err := getTitle(w, r)
if err != nil {
return
}
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
renderTemplate(w, "edit", p)
}
func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title, err := getTitle(w, r)
if err != nil {
return
}
body := r.FormValue("body")
p := &Page{Title: title, Body: []byte(body)}
err = p.save()
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
http.Redirect(w, r, "/view/"+title, http.StatusFound)
}
func renderTemplate(w http.ResponseWriter, tmpl string, p *Page) {
t, err := template.ParseFiles(tmpl + ".html")
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
err = t.Execute(w, p)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
}
var validPath = regexp.MustCompile("^/(edit|save|view)/([a-zA-Z0-9]+)$")
func getTitle(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) (string, error) {
m := validPath.FindStringSubmatch(r.URL.Path)
if m == nil {
http.NotFound(w, r)
return "", errors.New("Invalid Page Title")
}
return m[2], nil // The title is the second subexpression.
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", editHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/save/", saveHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/edit/"):]
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
t, _ := template.ParseFiles("edit.html")
t.Execute(w, p)
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/view/"):]
p, _ := loadPage(title)
t, _ := template.ParseFiles("view.html")
t.Execute(w, p)
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", editHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,91 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
"regexp"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string) {
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
http.Redirect(w, r, "/edit/"+title, http.StatusFound)
return
}
renderTemplate(w, "view", p)
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string) {
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
renderTemplate(w, "edit", p)
}
func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string) {
body := r.FormValue("body")
p := &Page{Title: title, Body: []byte(body)}
err := p.save()
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
http.Redirect(w, r, "/view/"+title, http.StatusFound)
}
func renderTemplate(w http.ResponseWriter, tmpl string, p *Page) {
t, err := template.ParseFiles(tmpl + ".html")
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
err = t.Execute(w, p)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
}
var validPath = regexp.MustCompile("^/(edit|save|view)/([a-zA-Z0-9]+)$")
func makeHandler(fn func(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request, string)) http.HandlerFunc {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
m := validPath.FindStringSubmatch(r.URL.Path)
if m == nil {
http.NotFound(w, r)
return
}
fn(w, r, m[2])
}
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", makeHandler(viewHandler))
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", makeHandler(editHandler))
http.HandleFunc("/save/", makeHandler(saveHandler))
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/edit/"):]
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
renderTemplate(w, "edit", p)
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/view/"):]
p, _ := loadPage(title)
renderTemplate(w, "view", p)
}
func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/save/"):]
body := r.FormValue("body")
p := &Page{Title: title, Body: []byte(body)}
p.save()
http.Redirect(w, r, "/view/"+title, http.StatusFound)
}
func renderTemplate(w http.ResponseWriter, tmpl string, p *Page) {
t, _ := template.ParseFiles(tmpl + ".html")
t.Execute(w, p)
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", editHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/save/", saveHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
*** final.go 2015-06-14 23:59:22.000000000 +0200
--- final-test.go 2015-06-15 00:15:41.000000000 +0200
***************
*** 7,12 ****
--- 7,14 ----
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
+ "log"
+ "net"
"net/http"
"regexp"
)
***************
*** 85,89 ****
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", makeHandler(editHandler))
http.HandleFunc("/save/", makeHandler(saveHandler))
! http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}
--- 87,101 ----
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", makeHandler(editHandler))
http.HandleFunc("/save/", makeHandler(saveHandler))
! l, err := net.Listen("tcp", "127.0.0.1:0")
! if err != nil {
! log.Fatal(err)
! }
! err = ioutil.WriteFile("final-test-port.txt", []byte(l.Addr().String()), 0644)
! if err != nil {
! log.Fatal(err)
! }
! s := &http.Server{}
! s.Serve(l)
! return
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,89 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
"regexp"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string) {
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
http.Redirect(w, r, "/edit/"+title, http.StatusFound)
return
}
renderTemplate(w, "view", p)
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string) {
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
renderTemplate(w, "edit", p)
}
func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string) {
body := r.FormValue("body")
p := &Page{Title: title, Body: []byte(body)}
err := p.save()
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
http.Redirect(w, r, "/view/"+title, http.StatusFound)
}
var templates = template.Must(template.ParseFiles("edit.html", "view.html"))
func renderTemplate(w http.ResponseWriter, tmpl string, p *Page) {
err := templates.ExecuteTemplate(w, tmpl+".html", p)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
}
var validPath = regexp.MustCompile("^/(edit|save|view)/([a-zA-Z0-9]+)$")
func makeHandler(fn func(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request, string)) http.HandlerFunc {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
m := validPath.FindStringSubmatch(r.URL.Path)
if m == nil {
http.NotFound(w, r)
return
}
fn(w, r, m[2])
}
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", makeHandler(viewHandler))
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", makeHandler(editHandler))
http.HandleFunc("/save/", makeHandler(saveHandler))
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

63
doc/articles/wiki/get.go Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
// Copyright 2011 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
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
"io"
"log"
"net"
"net/http"
"os"
"strings"
"time"
)
var (
post = flag.String("post", "", "urlencoded form data to POST")
addr = flag.Bool("addr", false, "find open address and print to stdout")
wait = flag.Duration("wait_for_port", 0, "if non-zero, the amount of time to wait for the address to become available")
)
func main() {
flag.Parse()
if *addr {
l, err := net.Listen("tcp", "127.0.0.1:0")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
defer l.Close()
fmt.Print(l.Addr())
return
}
url := flag.Arg(0)
if url == "" {
log.Fatal("no url supplied")
}
var r *http.Response
var err error
loopUntil := time.Now().Add(*wait)
for {
if *post != "" {
b := strings.NewReader(*post)
r, err = http.Post(url, "application/x-www-form-urlencoded", b)
} else {
r, err = http.Get(url)
}
if err == nil || *wait == 0 || time.Now().After(loopUntil) {
break
}
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond)
}
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
defer r.Body.Close()
_, err = io.Copy(os.Stdout, r.Body)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
)
func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hi there, I love %s!", r.URL.Path[1:])
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/", handler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,734 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Writing Web Applications",
"Template": true
}-->
<h2>Introduction</h2>
<p>
Covered in this tutorial:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Creating a data structure with load and save methods</li>
<li>Using the <code>net/http</code> package to build web applications
<li>Using the <code>html/template</code> package to process HTML templates</li>
<li>Using the <code>regexp</code> package to validate user input</li>
<li>Using closures</li>
</ul>
<p>
Assumed knowledge:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Programming experience</li>
<li>Understanding of basic web technologies (HTTP, HTML)</li>
<li>Some UNIX/DOS command-line knowledge</li>
</ul>
<h2>Getting Started</h2>
<p>
At present, you need to have a FreeBSD, Linux, OS X, or Windows machine to run Go.
We will use <code>$</code> to represent the command prompt.
</p>
<p>
Install Go (see the <a href="/doc/install">Installation Instructions</a>).
</p>
<p>
Make a new directory for this tutorial inside your <code>GOPATH</code> and cd to it:
</p>
<pre>
$ mkdir gowiki
$ cd gowiki
</pre>
<p>
Create a file named <code>wiki.go</code>, open it in your favorite editor, and
add the following lines:
</p>
<pre>
package main
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
)
</pre>
<p>
We import the <code>fmt</code> and <code>ioutil</code> packages from the Go
standard library. Later, as we implement additional functionality, we will
add more packages to this <code>import</code> declaration.
</p>
<h2>Data Structures</h2>
<p>
Let's start by defining the data structures. A wiki consists of a series of
interconnected pages, each of which has a title and a body (the page content).
Here, we define <code>Page</code> as a struct with two fields representing
the title and body.
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^type Page/` `/}/`}}
<p>
The type <code>[]byte</code> means "a <code>byte</code> slice".
(See <a href="/doc/articles/slices_usage_and_internals.html">Slices: usage and
internals</a> for more on slices.)
The <code>Body</code> element is a <code>[]byte</code> rather than
<code>string</code> because that is the type expected by the <code>io</code>
libraries we will use, as you'll see below.
</p>
<p>
The <code>Page</code> struct describes how page data will be stored in memory.
But what about persistent storage? We can address that by creating a
<code>save</code> method on <code>Page</code>:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^func.*Page.*save/` `/}/`}}
<p>
This method's signature reads: "This is a method named <code>save</code> that
takes as its receiver <code>p</code>, a pointer to <code>Page</code> . It takes
no parameters, and returns a value of type <code>error</code>."
</p>
<p>
This method will save the <code>Page</code>'s <code>Body</code> to a text
file. For simplicity, we will use the <code>Title</code> as the file name.
</p>
<p>
The <code>save</code> method returns an <code>error</code> value because
that is the return type of <code>WriteFile</code> (a standard library function
that writes a byte slice to a file). The <code>save</code> method returns the
error value, to let the application handle it should anything go wrong while
writing the file. If all goes well, <code>Page.save()</code> will return
<code>nil</code> (the zero-value for pointers, interfaces, and some other
types).
</p>
<p>
The octal integer literal <code>0600</code>, passed as the third parameter to
<code>WriteFile</code>, indicates that the file should be created with
read-write permissions for the current user only. (See the Unix man page
<code>open(2)</code> for details.)
</p>
<p>
In addition to saving pages, we will want to load pages, too:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1-noerror.go" `/^func loadPage/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The function <code>loadPage</code> constructs the file name from the title
parameter, reads the file's contents into a new variable <code>body</code>, and
returns a pointer to a <code>Page</code> literal constructed with the proper
title and body values.
</p>
<p>
Functions can return multiple values. The standard library function
<code>io.ReadFile</code> returns <code>[]byte</code> and <code>error</code>.
In <code>loadPage</code>, error isn't being handled yet; the "blank identifier"
represented by the underscore (<code>_</code>) symbol is used to throw away the
error return value (in essence, assigning the value to nothing).
</p>
<p>
But what happens if <code>ReadFile</code> encounters an error? For example,
the file might not exist. We should not ignore such errors. Let's modify the
function to return <code>*Page</code> and <code>error</code>.
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^func loadPage/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
Callers of this function can now check the second parameter; if it is
<code>nil</code> then it has successfully loaded a Page. If not, it will be an
<code>error</code> that can be handled by the caller (see the
<a href="/ref/spec#Errors">language specification</a> for details).
</p>
<p>
At this point we have a simple data structure and the ability to save to and
load from a file. Let's write a <code>main</code> function to test what we've
written:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part1.go" `/^func main/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
After compiling and executing this code, a file named <code>TestPage.txt</code>
would be created, containing the contents of <code>p1</code>. The file would
then be read into the struct <code>p2</code>, and its <code>Body</code> element
printed to the screen.
</p>
<p>
You can compile and run the program like this:
</p>
<pre>
$ go build wiki.go
$ ./wiki
This is a sample page.
</pre>
<p>
(If you're using Windows you must type "<code>wiki</code>" without the
"<code>./</code>" to run the program.)
</p>
<p>
<a href="part1.go">Click here to view the code we've written so far.</a>
</p>
<h2>Introducing the <code>net/http</code> package (an interlude)</h2>
<p>
Here's a full working example of a simple web server:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/http-sample.go"}}
<p>
The <code>main</code> function begins with a call to
<code>http.HandleFunc</code>, which tells the <code>http</code> package to
handle all requests to the web root (<code>"/"</code>) with
<code>handler</code>.
</p>
<p>
It then calls <code>http.ListenAndServe</code>, specifying that it should
listen on port 8080 on any interface (<code>":8080"</code>). (Don't
worry about its second parameter, <code>nil</code>, for now.)
This function will block until the program is terminated.
</p>
<p>
The function <code>handler</code> is of the type <code>http.HandlerFunc</code>.
It takes an <code>http.ResponseWriter</code> and an <code>http.Request</code> as
its arguments.
</p>
<p>
An <code>http.ResponseWriter</code> value assembles the HTTP server's response; by writing
to it, we send data to the HTTP client.
</p>
<p>
An <code>http.Request</code> is a data structure that represents the client
HTTP request. <code>r.URL.Path</code> is the path component
of the request URL. The trailing <code>[1:]</code> means
"create a sub-slice of <code>Path</code> from the 1st character to the end."
This drops the leading "/" from the path name.
</p>
<p>
If you run this program and access the URL:
</p>
<pre>http://localhost:8080/monkeys</pre>
<p>
the program would present a page containing:
</p>
<pre>Hi there, I love monkeys!</pre>
<h2>Using <code>net/http</code> to serve wiki pages</h2>
<p>
To use the <code>net/http</code> package, it must be imported:
</p>
<pre>
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
<b>"net/http"</b>
)
</pre>
<p>
Let's create a handler, <code>viewHandler</code> that will allow users to
view a wiki page. It will handle URLs prefixed with "/view/".
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part2.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
First, this function extracts the page title from <code>r.URL.Path</code>,
the path component of the request URL.
The <code>Path</code> is re-sliced with <code>[len("/view/"):]</code> to drop
the leading <code>"/view/"</code> component of the request path.
This is because the path will invariably begin with <code>"/view/"</code>,
which is not part of the page's title.
</p>
<p>
The function then loads the page data, formats the page with a string of simple
HTML, and writes it to <code>w</code>, the <code>http.ResponseWriter</code>.
</p>
<p>
Again, note the use of <code>_</code> to ignore the <code>error</code>
return value from <code>loadPage</code>. This is done here for simplicity
and generally considered bad practice. We will attend to this later.
</p>
<p>
To use this handler, we rewrite our <code>main</code> function to
initialize <code>http</code> using the <code>viewHandler</code> to handle
any requests under the path <code>/view/</code>.
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part2.go" `/^func main/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
<a href="part2.go">Click here to view the code we've written so far.</a>
</p>
<p>
Let's create some page data (as <code>test.txt</code>), compile our code, and
try serving a wiki page.
</p>
<p>
Open <code>test.txt</code> file in your editor, and save the string "Hello world" (without quotes)
in it.
</p>
<pre>
$ go build wiki.go
$ ./wiki
</pre>
<p>
(If you're using Windows you must type "<code>wiki</code>" without the
"<code>./</code>" to run the program.)
</p>
<p>
With this web server running, a visit to <code><a
href="http://localhost:8080/view/test">http://localhost:8080/view/test</a></code>
should show a page titled "test" containing the words "Hello world".
</p>
<h2>Editing Pages</h2>
<p>
A wiki is not a wiki without the ability to edit pages. Let's create two new
handlers: one named <code>editHandler</code> to display an 'edit page' form,
and the other named <code>saveHandler</code> to save the data entered via the
form.
</p>
<p>
First, we add them to <code>main()</code>:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func main/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The function <code>editHandler</code> loads the page
(or, if it doesn't exist, create an empty <code>Page</code> struct),
and displays an HTML form.
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/notemplate.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
This function will work fine, but all that hard-coded HTML is ugly.
Of course, there is a better way.
</p>
<h2>The <code>html/template</code> package</h2>
<p>
The <code>html/template</code> package is part of the Go standard library.
We can use <code>html/template</code> to keep the HTML in a separate file,
allowing us to change the layout of our edit page without modifying the
underlying Go code.
</p>
<p>
First, we must add <code>html/template</code> to the list of imports. We
also won't be using <code>fmt</code> anymore, so we have to remove that.
</p>
<pre>
import (
<b>"html/template"</b>
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
</pre>
<p>
Let's create a template file containing the HTML form.
Open a new file named <code>edit.html</code>, and add the following lines:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/edit.html"}}
<p>
Modify <code>editHandler</code> to use the template, instead of the hard-coded
HTML:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noerror.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The function <code>template.ParseFiles</code> will read the contents of
<code>edit.html</code> and return a <code>*template.Template</code>.
</p>
<p>
The method <code>t.Execute</code> executes the template, writing the
generated HTML to the <code>http.ResponseWriter</code>.
The <code>.Title</code> and <code>.Body</code> dotted identifiers refer to
<code>p.Title</code> and <code>p.Body</code>.
</p>
<p>
Template directives are enclosed in double curly braces.
The <code>printf "%s" .Body</code> instruction is a function call
that outputs <code>.Body</code> as a string instead of a stream of bytes,
the same as a call to <code>fmt.Printf</code>.
The <code>html/template</code> package helps guarantee that only safe and
correct-looking HTML is generated by template actions. For instance, it
automatically escapes any greater than sign (<code>&gt;</code>), replacing it
with <code>&amp;gt;</code>, to make sure user data does not corrupt the form
HTML.
</p>
<p>
Since we're working with templates now, let's create a template for our
<code>viewHandler</code> called <code>view.html</code>:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/view.html"}}
<p>
Modify <code>viewHandler</code> accordingly:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noerror.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
Notice that we've used almost exactly the same templating code in both
handlers. Let's remove this duplication by moving the templating code
to its own function:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func renderTemplate/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
And modify the handlers to use that function:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
If we comment out the registration of our unimplemented save handler in
<code>main</code>, we can once again build and test our program.
<a href="part3.go">Click here to view the code we've written so far.</a>
</p>
<h2>Handling non-existent pages</h2>
<p>
What if you visit <a href="http://localhost:8080/view/APageThatDoesntExist">
<code>/view/APageThatDoesntExist</code></a>? You'll see a page containing
HTML. This is because it ignores the error return value from
<code>loadPage</code> and continues to try and fill out the template
with no data. Instead, if the requested Page doesn't exist, it should
redirect the client to the edit Page so the content may be created:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part3-errorhandling.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The <code>http.Redirect</code> function adds an HTTP status code of
<code>http.StatusFound</code> (302) and a <code>Location</code>
header to the HTTP response.
</p>
<h2>Saving Pages</h2>
<p>
The function <code>saveHandler</code> will handle the submission of forms
located on the edit pages. After uncommenting the related line in
<code>main</code>, let's implement the handler:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-template.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The page title (provided in the URL) and the form's only field,
<code>Body</code>, are stored in a new <code>Page</code>.
The <code>save()</code> method is then called to write the data to a file,
and the client is redirected to the <code>/view/</code> page.
</p>
<p>
The value returned by <code>FormValue</code> is of type <code>string</code>.
We must convert that value to <code>[]byte</code> before it will fit into
the <code>Page</code> struct. We use <code>[]byte(body)</code> to perform
the conversion.
</p>
<h2>Error handling</h2>
<p>
There are several places in our program where errors are being ignored. This
is bad practice, not least because when an error does occur the program will
have unintended behavior. A better solution is to handle the errors and return
an error message to the user. That way if something does go wrong, the server
will function exactly how we want and the user can be notified.
</p>
<p>
First, let's handle the errors in <code>renderTemplate</code>:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-parsetemplate.go" `/^func renderTemplate/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The <code>http.Error</code> function sends a specified HTTP response code
(in this case "Internal Server Error") and error message.
Already the decision to put this in a separate function is paying off.
</p>
<p>
Now let's fix up <code>saveHandler</code>:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/part3-errorhandling.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
Any errors that occur during <code>p.save()</code> will be reported
to the user.
</p>
<h2>Template caching</h2>
<p>
There is an inefficiency in this code: <code>renderTemplate</code> calls
<code>ParseFiles</code> every time a page is rendered.
A better approach would be to call <code>ParseFiles</code> once at program
initialization, parsing all templates into a single <code>*Template</code>.
Then we can use the
<a href="/pkg/html/template/#Template.ExecuteTemplate"><code>ExecuteTemplate</code></a>
method to render a specific template.
</p>
<p>
First we create a global variable named <code>templates</code>, and initialize
it with <code>ParseFiles</code>.
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/var templates/`}}
<p>
The function <code>template.Must</code> is a convenience wrapper that panics
when passed a non-nil <code>error</code> value, and otherwise returns the
<code>*Template</code> unaltered. A panic is appropriate here; if the templates
can't be loaded the only sensible thing to do is exit the program.
</p>
<p>
The <code>ParseFiles</code> function takes any number of string arguments that
identify our template files, and parses those files into templates that are
named after the base file name. If we were to add more templates to our
program, we would add their names to the <code>ParseFiles</code> call's
arguments.
</p>
<p>
We then modify the <code>renderTemplate</code> function to call the
<code>templates.ExecuteTemplate</code> method with the name of the appropriate
template:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/func renderTemplate/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
Note that the template name is the template file name, so we must
append <code>".html"</code> to the <code>tmpl</code> argument.
</p>
<h2>Validation</h2>
<p>
As you may have observed, this program has a serious security flaw: a user
can supply an arbitrary path to be read/written on the server. To mitigate
this, we can write a function to validate the title with a regular expression.
</p>
<p>
First, add <code>"regexp"</code> to the <code>import</code> list.
Then we can create a global variable to store our validation
expression:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^var validPath/`}}
<p>
The function <code>regexp.MustCompile</code> will parse and compile the
regular expression, and return a <code>regexp.Regexp</code>.
<code>MustCompile</code> is distinct from <code>Compile</code> in that it will
panic if the expression compilation fails, while <code>Compile</code> returns
an <code>error</code> as a second parameter.
</p>
<p>
Now, let's write a function that uses the <code>validPath</code>
expression to validate path and extract the page title:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/func getTitle/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
If the title is valid, it will be returned along with a <code>nil</code>
error value. If the title is invalid, the function will write a
"404 Not Found" error to the HTTP connection, and return an error to the
handler. To create a new error, we have to import the <code>errors</code>
package.
</p>
<p>
Let's put a call to <code>getTitle</code> in each of the handlers:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final-noclosure.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<h2>Introducing Function Literals and Closures</h2>
<p>
Catching the error condition in each handler introduces a lot of repeated code.
What if we could wrap each of the handlers in a function that does this
validation and error checking? Go's
<a href="/ref/spec#Function_literals">function
literals</a> provide a powerful means of abstracting functionality
that can help us here.
</p>
<p>
First, we re-write the function definition of each of the handlers to accept
a title string:
</p>
<pre>
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string)
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string)
func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, title string)
</pre>
<p>
Now let's define a wrapper function that <i>takes a function of the above
type</i>, and returns a function of type <code>http.HandlerFunc</code>
(suitable to be passed to the function <code>http.HandleFunc</code>):
</p>
<pre>
func makeHandler(fn func (http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request, string)) http.HandlerFunc {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
// Here we will extract the page title from the Request,
// and call the provided handler 'fn'
}
}
</pre>
<p>
The returned function is called a closure because it encloses values defined
outside of it. In this case, the variable <code>fn</code> (the single argument
to <code>makeHandler</code>) is enclosed by the closure. The variable
<code>fn</code> will be one of our save, edit, or view handlers.
</p>
<p>
Now we can take the code from <code>getTitle</code> and use it here
(with some minor modifications):
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/func makeHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
The closure returned by <code>makeHandler</code> is a function that takes
an <code>http.ResponseWriter</code> and <code>http.Request</code> (in other
words, an <code>http.HandlerFunc</code>).
The closure extracts the <code>title</code> from the request path, and
validates it with the <code>TitleValidator</code> regexp. If the
<code>title</code> is invalid, an error will be written to the
<code>ResponseWriter</code> using the <code>http.NotFound</code> function.
If the <code>title</code> is valid, the enclosed handler function
<code>fn</code> will be called with the <code>ResponseWriter</code>,
<code>Request</code>, and <code>title</code> as arguments.
</p>
<p>
Now we can wrap the handler functions with <code>makeHandler</code> in
<code>main</code>, before they are registered with the <code>http</code>
package:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/func main/` `/^}/`}}
<p>
Finally we remove the calls to <code>getTitle</code> from the handler functions,
making them much simpler:
</p>
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/^func viewHandler/` `/^}/`}}
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/^func editHandler/` `/^}/`}}
{{code "doc/articles/wiki/final.go" `/^func saveHandler/` `/^}/`}}
<h2>Try it out!</h2>
<p>
<a href="final.go">Click here to view the final code listing.</a>
</p>
<p>
Recompile the code, and run the app:
</p>
<pre>
$ go build wiki.go
$ ./wiki
</pre>
<p>
Visiting <a href="http://localhost:8080/view/ANewPage">http://localhost:8080/view/ANewPage</a>
should present you with the page edit form. You should then be able to
enter some text, click 'Save', and be redirected to the newly created page.
</p>
<h2>Other tasks</h2>
<p>
Here are some simple tasks you might want to tackle on your own:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Store templates in <code>tmpl/</code> and page data in <code>data/</code>.
<li>Add a handler to make the web root redirect to
<code>/view/FrontPage</code>.</li>
<li>Spruce up the page templates by making them valid HTML and adding some
CSS rules.</li>
<li>Implement inter-page linking by converting instances of
<code>[PageName]</code> to <br>
<code>&lt;a href="/view/PageName"&gt;PageName&lt;/a&gt;</code>.
(hint: you could use <code>regexp.ReplaceAllFunc</code> to do this)
</li>
</ul>

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@@ -0,0 +1,56 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/view/"):]
p, _ := loadPage(title)
fmt.Fprintf(w, "<h1>%s</h1><div>%s</div>", p.Title, p.Body)
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/edit/"):]
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
fmt.Fprintf(w, "<h1>Editing %s</h1>"+
"<form action=\"/save/%s\" method=\"POST\">"+
"<textarea name=\"body\">%s</textarea><br>"+
"<input type=\"submit\" value=\"Save\">"+
"</form>",
p.Title, p.Title, p.Body)
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", editHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

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@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) *Page {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, _ := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}
}
func main() {
p1 := &Page{Title: "TestPage", Body: []byte("This is a sample page.")}
p1.save()
p2 := loadPage("TestPage")
fmt.Println(string(p2.Body))
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func main() {
p1 := &Page{Title: "TestPage", Body: []byte("This is a sample Page.")}
p1.save()
p2, _ := loadPage("TestPage")
fmt.Println(string(p2.Body))
}

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@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/view/"):]
p, _ := loadPage(title)
fmt.Fprintf(w, "<h1>%s</h1><div>%s</div>", p.Title, p.Body)
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

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@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func renderTemplate(w http.ResponseWriter, tmpl string, p *Page) {
t, _ := template.ParseFiles(tmpl + ".html")
t.Execute(w, p)
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/view/"):]
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
http.Redirect(w, r, "/edit/"+title, http.StatusFound)
return
}
renderTemplate(w, "view", p)
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/edit/"):]
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
renderTemplate(w, "edit", p)
}
func saveHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/save/"):]
body := r.FormValue("body")
p := &Page{Title: title, Body: []byte(body)}
err := p.save()
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
http.Redirect(w, r, "/view/"+title, http.StatusFound)
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", editHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/save/", saveHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

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@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"html/template"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
)
type Page struct {
Title string
Body []byte
}
func (p *Page) save() error {
filename := p.Title + ".txt"
return ioutil.WriteFile(filename, p.Body, 0600)
}
func loadPage(title string) (*Page, error) {
filename := title + ".txt"
body, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filename)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Page{Title: title, Body: body}, nil
}
func renderTemplate(w http.ResponseWriter, tmpl string, p *Page) {
t, _ := template.ParseFiles(tmpl + ".html")
t.Execute(w, p)
}
func viewHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/view/"):]
p, _ := loadPage(title)
renderTemplate(w, "view", p)
}
func editHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
title := r.URL.Path[len("/edit/"):]
p, err := loadPage(title)
if err != nil {
p = &Page{Title: title}
}
renderTemplate(w, "edit", p)
}
func main() {
http.HandleFunc("/view/", viewHandler)
http.HandleFunc("/edit/", editHandler)
//http.HandleFunc("/save/", saveHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}

58
doc/articles/wiki/test.bash Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Copyright 2010 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.
set -e
if ! which patch > /dev/null; then
echo "Skipping test; patch command not found."
exit 0
fi
wiki_pid=
cleanup() {
kill $wiki_pid
rm -f test_*.out Test.txt final-test.go final-test.bin final-test-port.txt a.out get.bin
}
trap cleanup 0 INT
rm -f get.bin final-test.bin a.out
# If called with -all, check that all code snippets compile.
if [ "$1" = "-all" ]; then
for fn in *.go; do
go build -o a.out $fn
done
fi
go build -o get.bin get.go
cp final.go final-test.go
patch final-test.go final-test.patch > /dev/null
go build -o final-test.bin final-test.go
./final-test.bin &
wiki_pid=$!
l=0
while [ ! -f ./final-test-port.txt ]
do
l=$(($l+1))
if [ "$l" -gt 5 ]
then
echo "port not available within 5 seconds"
exit 1
break
fi
sleep 1
done
addr=$(cat final-test-port.txt)
./get.bin http://$addr/edit/Test > test_edit.out
diff -u test_edit.out test_edit.good
./get.bin -post=body=some%20content http://$addr/save/Test > test_save.out
diff -u test_save.out test_view.good # should be the same as viewing
diff -u Test.txt test_Test.txt.good
./get.bin http://$addr/view/Test > test_view.out
diff -u test_view.out test_view.good
echo PASS

View File

@@ -0,0 +1 @@
some content

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
<h1>Editing Test</h1>
<form action="/save/Test" method="POST">
<div><textarea name="body" rows="20" cols="80"></textarea></div>
<div><input type="submit" value="Save"></div>
</form>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
<h1>Test</h1>
<p>[<a href="/edit/Test">edit</a>]</p>
<div>some content</div>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
<h1>{{.Title}}</h1>
<p>[<a href="/edit/{{.Title}}">edit</a>]</p>
<div>{{printf "%s" .Body}}</div>

View File

@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ Instead, the compiler operates on a kind of semi-abstract instruction set,
and instruction selection occurs partly after code generation.
The assembler works on the semi-abstract form, so
when you see an instruction like <code>MOV</code>
what the toolchain actually generates for that operation might
what the tool chain actually generates for that operation might
not be a move instruction at all, perhaps a clear or load.
Or it might correspond exactly to the machine instruction with that name.
In general, machine-specific operations tend to appear as themselves, while more general concepts like
@@ -57,66 +57,59 @@ func main() {
println(3)
}
$ GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go tool compile -S x.go # or: go build -gcflags -S x.go
"".main STEXT size=74 args=0x0 locals=0x10
0x0000 00000 (x.go:3) TEXT "".main(SB), $16-0
0x0000 00000 (x.go:3) MOVQ (TLS), CX
0x0009 00009 (x.go:3) CMPQ SP, 16(CX)
0x000d 00013 (x.go:3) JLS 67
0x000f 00015 (x.go:3) SUBQ $16, SP
0x0013 00019 (x.go:3) MOVQ BP, 8(SP)
0x0018 00024 (x.go:3) LEAQ 8(SP), BP
0x001d 00029 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $0, gclocals·33cdeccccebe80329f1fdbee7f5874cb(SB)
0x001d 00029 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $1, gclocals·33cdeccccebe80329f1fdbee7f5874cb(SB)
0x001d 00029 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $2, gclocals·33cdeccccebe80329f1fdbee7f5874cb(SB)
0x001d 00029 (x.go:4) PCDATA $0, $0
0x001d 00029 (x.go:4) PCDATA $1, $0
0x001d 00029 (x.go:4) CALL runtime.printlock(SB)
0x0022 00034 (x.go:4) MOVQ $3, (SP)
0x002a 00042 (x.go:4) CALL runtime.printint(SB)
0x002f 00047 (x.go:4) CALL runtime.printnl(SB)
0x0034 00052 (x.go:4) CALL runtime.printunlock(SB)
0x0039 00057 (x.go:5) MOVQ 8(SP), BP
0x003e 00062 (x.go:5) ADDQ $16, SP
0x0042 00066 (x.go:5) RET
0x0043 00067 (x.go:5) NOP
0x0043 00067 (x.go:3) PCDATA $1, $-1
0x0043 00067 (x.go:3) PCDATA $0, $-1
0x0043 00067 (x.go:3) CALL runtime.morestack_noctxt(SB)
0x0048 00072 (x.go:3) JMP 0
--- prog list "main" ---
0000 (x.go:3) TEXT main+0(SB),$8-0
0001 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $0,gcargs·0+0(SB)
0002 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $1,gclocals·0+0(SB)
0003 (x.go:4) MOVQ $3,(SP)
0004 (x.go:4) PCDATA $0,$8
0005 (x.go:4) CALL ,runtime.printint+0(SB)
0006 (x.go:4) PCDATA $0,$-1
0007 (x.go:4) PCDATA $0,$0
0008 (x.go:4) CALL ,runtime.printnl+0(SB)
0009 (x.go:4) PCDATA $0,$-1
0010 (x.go:5) RET ,
...
</pre>
<p>
The <code>FUNCDATA</code> and <code>PCDATA</code> directives contain information
for use by the garbage collector; they are introduced by the compiler.
</p>
</p>
<!-- Commenting out because the feature is gone but it's popular and may come back.
<p>
To see what gets put in the binary after linking, use <code>go tool objdump</code>:
To see what gets put in the binary after linking, add the <code>-a</code> flag to the linker:
</p>
<pre>
$ go build -o x.exe x.go
$ go tool objdump -s main.main x.exe
TEXT main.main(SB) /tmp/x.go
x.go:3 0x10501c0 65488b0c2530000000 MOVQ GS:0x30, CX
x.go:3 0x10501c9 483b6110 CMPQ 0x10(CX), SP
x.go:3 0x10501cd 7634 JBE 0x1050203
x.go:3 0x10501cf 4883ec10 SUBQ $0x10, SP
x.go:3 0x10501d3 48896c2408 MOVQ BP, 0x8(SP)
x.go:3 0x10501d8 488d6c2408 LEAQ 0x8(SP), BP
x.go:4 0x10501dd e86e45fdff CALL runtime.printlock(SB)
x.go:4 0x10501e2 48c7042403000000 MOVQ $0x3, 0(SP)
x.go:4 0x10501ea e8e14cfdff CALL runtime.printint(SB)
x.go:4 0x10501ef e8ec47fdff CALL runtime.printnl(SB)
x.go:4 0x10501f4 e8d745fdff CALL runtime.printunlock(SB)
x.go:5 0x10501f9 488b6c2408 MOVQ 0x8(SP), BP
x.go:5 0x10501fe 4883c410 ADDQ $0x10, SP
x.go:5 0x1050202 c3 RET
x.go:3 0x1050203 e83882ffff CALL runtime.morestack_noctxt(SB)
x.go:3 0x1050208 ebb6 JMP main.main(SB)
$ go tool 6l -a x.6 # or: go build -ldflags -a x.go
codeblk [0x2000,0x1d059) at offset 0x1000
002000 main.main | (3) TEXT main.main+0(SB),$8
002000 65488b0c25a0080000 | (3) MOVQ 2208(GS),CX
002009 483b21 | (3) CMPQ SP,(CX)
00200c 7707 | (3) JHI ,2015
00200e e83da20100 | (3) CALL ,1c250+runtime.morestack00
002013 ebeb | (3) JMP ,2000
002015 4883ec08 | (3) SUBQ $8,SP
002019 | (3) FUNCDATA $0,main.gcargs·0+0(SB)
002019 | (3) FUNCDATA $1,main.gclocals·0+0(SB)
002019 48c7042403000000 | (4) MOVQ $3,(SP)
002021 | (4) PCDATA $0,$8
002021 e8aad20000 | (4) CALL ,f2d0+runtime.printint
002026 | (4) PCDATA $0,$-1
002026 | (4) PCDATA $0,$0
002026 e865d40000 | (4) CALL ,f490+runtime.printnl
00202b | (4) PCDATA $0,$-1
00202b 4883c408 | (5) ADDQ $8,SP
00202f c3 | (5) RET ,
...
</pre>
-->
<h3 id="constants">Constants</h3>
<p>
@@ -146,7 +139,7 @@ The exact set depends on the architecture.
<p>
There are four predeclared symbols that refer to pseudo-registers.
These are not real registers, but rather virtual registers maintained by
the toolchain, such as a frame pointer.
the tool chain, such as a frame pointer.
The set of pseudo-registers is the same for all architectures:
</p>
@@ -166,7 +159,7 @@ jumps and branches.
</li>
<li>
<code>SP</code>: Stack pointer: the highest address within the local stack frame.
<code>SP</code>: Stack pointer: top of stack.
</li>
</ul>
@@ -216,7 +209,7 @@ If a Go prototype does not name its result, the expected assembly name is <code>
The <code>SP</code> pseudo-register is a virtual stack pointer
used to refer to frame-local variables and the arguments being
prepared for function calls.
It points to the highest address within the local stack frame, so references should use negative offsets
It points to the top of the local stack frame, so references should use negative offsets
in the range [framesize, 0):
<code>x-8(SP)</code>, <code>y-4(SP)</code>, and so on.
</p>
@@ -273,7 +266,7 @@ that assembly programming is a fraught endeavor.
</p>
<p>
In Go object files and binaries, the full name of a symbol is the
In Go object files and binaries, the full name of a symbol is the
package path followed by a period and the symbol name:
<code>fmt.Printf</code> or <code>math/rand.Int</code>.
Because the assembler's parser treats period and slash as punctuation,
@@ -409,7 +402,7 @@ The linker will choose one of the duplicates to use.
(For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
Don't insert the preamble to check if the stack must be split.
The frame for the routine, plus anything it calls, must fit in the
spare space remaining in the current stack segment.
spare space at the top of the stack segment.
Used to protect routines such as the stack splitting code itself.
</li>
<li>
@@ -437,84 +430,8 @@ This is a wrapper function and should not count as disabling <code>recover</code
(For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
This function is a closure so it uses its incoming context register.
</li>
<li>
<code>LOCAL</code> = 128
<br>
This symbol is local to the dynamic shared object.
</li>
<li>
<code>TLSBSS</code> = 256
<br>
(For <code>DATA</code> and <code>GLOBL</code> items.)
Put this data in thread local storage.
</li>
<li>
<code>NOFRAME</code> = 512
<br>
(For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
Do not insert instructions to allocate a stack frame and save/restore the return
address, even if this is not a leaf function.
Only valid on functions that declare a frame size of 0.
</li>
<li>
<code>TOPFRAME</code> = 2048
<br>
(For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
Function is the outermost frame of the call stack. Traceback should stop at this function.
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="data-offsets">Interacting with Go types and constants</h3>
<p>
If a package has any .s files, then <code>go build</code> will direct
the compiler to emit a special header called <code>go_asm.h</code>,
which the .s files can then <code>#include</code>.
The file contains symbolic <code>#define</code> constants for the
offsets of Go struct fields, the sizes of Go struct types, and most
Go <code>const</code> declarations defined in the current package.
Go assembly should avoid making assumptions about the layout of Go
types and instead use these constants.
This improves the readability of assembly code, and keeps it robust to
changes in data layout either in the Go type definitions or in the
layout rules used by the Go compiler.
</p>
<p>
Constants are of the form <code>const_<i>name</i></code>.
For example, given the Go declaration <code>const bufSize =
1024</code>, assembly code can refer to the value of this constant
as <code>const_bufSize</code>.
</p>
<p>
Field offsets are of the form <code><i>type</i>_<i>field</i></code>.
Struct sizes are of the form <code><i>type</i>__size</code>.
For example, consider the following Go definition:
</p>
<pre>
type reader struct {
buf [bufSize]byte
r int
}
</pre>
<p>
Assembly can refer to the size of this struct
as <code>reader__size</code> and the offsets of the two fields
as <code>reader_buf</code> and <code>reader_r</code>.
Hence, if register <code>R1</code> contains a pointer to
a <code>reader</code>, assembly can reference the <code>r</code> field
as <code>reader_r(R1)</code>.
</p>
<p>
If any of these <code>#define</code> names are ambiguous (for example,
a struct with a <code>_size</code> field), <code>#include
"go_asm.h"</code> will fail with a "redefinition of macro" error.
</p>
<h3 id="runtime">Runtime Coordination</h3>
<p>
@@ -568,7 +485,7 @@ even for assembly functions not called directly from Go.
At the start of the function, the arguments are assumed
to be initialized but the results are assumed uninitialized.
If the results will hold live pointers during a call instruction,
the function should start by zeroing the results and then
the function should start by zeroing the results and then
executing the pseudo-instruction <code>GO_RESULTS_INITIALIZED</code>.
This instruction records that the results are now initialized
and should be scanned during stack movement and garbage collection.
@@ -586,7 +503,7 @@ on the <code>TEXT</code> instruction.
The pointer information can also be omitted if the
function contains no call instructions.
Otherwise, the local stack frame must not contain pointers,
and the assembly must confirm this fact by executing the
and the assembly must confirm this fact by executing the
pseudo-instruction <code>NO_LOCAL_POINTERS</code>.
Because stack resizing is implemented by moving the stack,
the stack pointer may change during any function call:
@@ -666,30 +583,27 @@ Here follow some descriptions of key Go-specific details for the supported archi
<p>
The runtime pointer to the <code>g</code> structure is maintained
through the value of an otherwise unused (as far as Go is concerned) register in the MMU.
In the runtime package, assembly code can include <code>go_tls.h</code>, which defines
an OS- and architecture-dependent macro <code>get_tls</code> for accessing this register.
The <code>get_tls</code> macro takes one argument, which is the register to load the
<code>g</code> pointer into.
</p>
<p>
For example, the sequence to load <code>g</code> and <code>m</code>
using <code>CX</code> looks like this:
A OS-dependent macro <code>get_tls</code> is defined for the assembler if the source includes
a special header, <code>go_asm.h</code>:
</p>
<pre>
#include "go_tls.h"
#include "go_asm.h"
...
</pre>
<p>
Within the runtime, the <code>get_tls</code> macro loads its argument register
with a pointer to the <code>g</code> pointer, and the <code>g</code> struct
contains the <code>m</code> pointer.
The sequence to load <code>g</code> and <code>m</code> using <code>CX</code> looks like this:
</p>
<pre>
get_tls(CX)
MOVL g(CX), AX // Move g into AX.
MOVL g_m(AX), BX // Move g.m into BX.
</pre>
<p>
The <code>get_tls</code> macro is also defined on <a href="#amd64">amd64</a>.
</p>
<p>
Addressing modes:
</p>
@@ -731,13 +645,6 @@ MOVQ g(CX), AX // Move g into AX.
MOVQ g_m(AX), BX // Move g.m into BX.
</pre>
<p>
Register <code>BP</code> is callee-save.
The assembler automatically inserts <code>BP</code> save/restore when frame size is larger than zero.
Using <code>BP</code> as a general purpose register is allowed,
however it can interfere with sampling-based profiling.
</p>
<h3 id="arm">ARM</h3>
<p>
@@ -828,11 +735,7 @@ The other codes are <code>-&gt;</code> (arithmetic right shift),
<h3 id="arm64">ARM64</h3>
<p>
<code>R18</code> is the "platform register", reserved on the Apple platform.
To prevent accidental misuse, the register is named <code>R18_PLATFORM</code>.
<code>R27</code> and <code>R28</code> are reserved by the compiler and linker.
<code>R29</code> is the frame pointer.
<code>R30</code> is the link register.
The ARM64 port is in an experimental state.
</p>
<p>
@@ -849,71 +752,32 @@ Addressing modes:
<ul>
<li>
<code>R0-&gt;16</code>
<br>
<code>R0&gt;&gt;16</code>
<br>
<code>R0&lt;&lt;16</code>
<br>
<code>R0@&gt;16</code>:
These are the same as on the 32-bit ARM.
</li>
<li>
<code>$(8&lt;&lt;12)</code>:
Left shift the immediate value <code>8</code> by <code>12</code> bits.
</li>
<li>
<code>8(R0)</code>:
Add the value of <code>R0</code> and <code>8</code>.
</li>
<li>
<code>(R2)(R0)</code>:
The location at <code>R0</code> plus <code>R2</code>.
</li>
<li>
<code>R0.UXTB</code>
<br>
<code>R0.UXTB&lt;&lt;imm</code>:
<code>UXTB</code>: extract an 8-bit value from the low-order bits of <code>R0</code> and zero-extend it to the size of <code>R0</code>.
<code>R0.UXTB&lt;&lt;imm</code>: left shift the result of <code>R0.UXTB</code> by <code>imm</code> bits.
The <code>imm</code> value can be 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4.
The other extensions include <code>UXTH</code> (16-bit), <code>UXTW</code> (32-bit), and <code>UXTX</code> (64-bit).
</li>
<li>
<code>R0.SXTB</code>
<br>
<code>R0.SXTB&lt;&lt;imm</code>:
<code>SXTB</code>: extract an 8-bit value from the low-order bits of <code>R0</code> and sign-extend it to the size of <code>R0</code>.
<code>R0.SXTB&lt;&lt;imm</code>: left shift the result of <code>R0.SXTB</code> by <code>imm</code> bits.
The <code>imm</code> value can be 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4.
The other extensions include <code>SXTH</code> (16-bit), <code>SXTW</code> (32-bit), and <code>SXTX</code> (64-bit).
</li>
<li>
<code>(R5, R6)</code>: Register pair for <code>LDAXP</code>/<code>LDP</code>/<code>LDXP</code>/<code>STLXP</code>/<code>STP</code>/<code>STP</code>.
<code>(R5, R6)</code>: Register pair for <code>LDP</code>/<code>STP</code>.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
Reference: <a href="/pkg/cmd/internal/obj/arm64">Go ARM64 Assembly Instructions Reference Manual</a>
</p>
<h3 id="ppc64">PPC64</h3>
<h3 id="ppc64">64-bit PowerPC, a.k.a. ppc64</h3>
<p>
This assembler is used by GOARCH values ppc64 and ppc64le.
The 64-bit PowerPC port is in an experimental state.
</p>
<p>
Reference: <a href="/pkg/cmd/internal/obj/ppc64">Go PPC64 Assembly Instructions Reference Manual</a>
Addressing modes:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
<code>(R5)(R6*1)</code>: The location at <code>R5</code> plus <code>R6</code>. It is a scaled
mode as on the x86, but the only scale allowed is <code>1</code>.
</li>
<li>
<code>(R5+R6)</code>: Alias for (R5)(R6*1)
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="s390x">IBM z/Architecture, a.k.a. s390x</h3>
@@ -1012,18 +876,6 @@ Addressing modes:
</ul>
<p>
The value of <code>GOMIPS</code> environment variable (<code>hardfloat</code> or
<code>softfloat</code>) is made available to assembly code by predefining either
<code>GOMIPS_hardfloat</code> or <code>GOMIPS_softfloat</code>.
</p>
<p>
The value of <code>GOMIPS64</code> environment variable (<code>hardfloat</code> or
<code>softfloat</code>) is made available to assembly code by predefining either
<code>GOMIPS64_hardfloat</code> or <code>GOMIPS64_softfloat</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="unsupported_opcodes">Unsupported opcodes</h3>
<p>

103
doc/cmd.html Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Command Documentation",
"Path": "/doc/cmd"
}-->
<p>
There is a suite of programs to build and process Go source code.
Instead of being run directly, programs in the suite are usually invoked
by the <a href="/cmd/go/">go</a> program.
</p>
<p>
The most common way to run these programs is as a subcommand of the go program,
for instance as <code>go fmt</code>. Run like this, the command operates on
complete packages of Go source code, with the go program invoking the
underlying binary with arguments appropriate to package-level processing.
</p>
<p>
The programs can also be run as stand-alone binaries, with unmodified arguments,
using the go <code>tool</code> subcommand, such as <code>go tool vet</code>.
This style of invocation allows, for instance, checking a single source file
rather than an entire package: <code>go tool vet myprogram.go</code> as
compared to <code>go vet mypackage</code>.
Some of the commands, such as <code>pprof</code>, are accessible only through
the go <code>tool</code> subcommand.
</p>
<p>
Finally the <code>fmt</code> and <code>godoc</code> commands are installed
as regular binaries called <code>gofmt</code> and <code>godoc</code> because
they are so often referenced.
</p>
<p>
Click on the links for more documentation, invocation methods, and usage details.
</p>
<table class="dir">
<tr>
<th>Name</th>
<th>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</th>
<th>Synopsis</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="/cmd/go/">go</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>
The <code>go</code> program manages Go source code and runs the other
commands listed here.
See the command docs for usage
details.
<br><br>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="/cmd/cgo/">cgo</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>Cgo enables the creation of Go packages that call C code.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="/cmd/cover/">cover</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>Cover is a program for creating and analyzing the coverage profiles
generated by <code>"go test -coverprofile"</code>.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="/cmd/fix/">fix</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>Fix finds Go programs that use old features of the language and libraries
and rewrites them to use newer ones.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="/cmd/go/">fmt</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>Fmt formats Go packages, it is also available as an independent <a href="/cmd/gofmt/">
gofmt</a> command with more general options.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="//godoc.org/golang.org/x/tools/cmd/godoc/">godoc</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>Godoc extracts and generates documentation for Go packages.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><a href="/cmd/vet/">vet</a></td>
<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
<td>Vet examines Go source code and reports suspicious constructs, such as Printf
calls whose arguments do not align with the format string.</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
This is an abridged list. See the <a href="/cmd/">full command reference</a>
for documentation of the compilers and more.
</p>

683
doc/code.html Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,683 @@
<!--{
"Title": "How to Write Go Code"
}-->
<h2 id="Introduction">Introduction</h2>
<p>
This document demonstrates the development of a simple Go package and
introduces the <a href="/cmd/go/">go tool</a>, the standard way to fetch,
build, and install Go packages and commands.
</p>
<p>
The <code>go</code> tool requires you to organize your code in a specific
way. Please read this document carefully.
It explains the simplest way to get up and running with your Go installation.
</p>
<p>
A similar explanation is available as a
<a href="//www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCsL89YtqCs">screencast</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="Organization">Code organization</h2>
<h3 id="Overview">Overview</h3>
<ul>
<li>Go programmers typically keep all their Go code in a single <i>workspace</i>.</li>
<li>A workspace contains many version control <i>repositories</i>
(managed by Git, for example).</li>
<li>Each repository contains one or more <i>packages</i>.</li>
<li>Each package consists of one or more Go source files in a single directory.</li>
<li>The path to a package's directory determines its <i>import path</i>.</li>
</ul>
<p>
Note that this differs from other programming environments in which every
project has a separate workspace and workspaces are closely tied to version
control repositories.
</p>
<h3 id="Workspaces">Workspaces</h3>
<p>
A workspace is a directory hierarchy with three directories at its root:
</p>
<ul>
<li><code>src</code> contains Go source files,
<li><code>pkg</code> contains package objects, and
<li><code>bin</code> contains executable commands.
</ul>
<p>
The <code>go</code> tool builds source packages and installs the resulting
binaries to the <code>pkg</code> and <code>bin</code> directories.
</p>
<p>
The <code>src</code> subdirectory typically contains multiple version control
repositories (such as for Git or Mercurial) that track the development of one
or more source packages.
</p>
<p>
To give you an idea of how a workspace looks in practice, here's an example:
</p>
<pre>
bin/
hello # command executable
outyet # command executable
pkg/
linux_amd64/
github.com/golang/example/
stringutil.a # package object
src/
<a href="https://github.com/golang/example/">github.com/golang/example/</a>
.git/ # Git repository metadata
hello/
hello.go # command source
outyet/
main.go # command source
main_test.go # test source
stringutil/
reverse.go # package source
reverse_test.go # test source
<a href="https://golang.org/x/image/">golang.org/x/image/</a>
.git/ # Git repository metadata
bmp/
reader.go # package source
writer.go # package source
... (many more repositories and packages omitted) ...
</pre>
<p>
The tree above shows a workspace containing two repositories
(<code>example</code> and <code>image</code>).
The <code>example</code> repository contains two commands (<code>hello</code>
and <code>outyet</code>) and one library (<code>stringutil</code>).
The <code>image</code> repository contains the <code>bmp</code> package
and <a href="https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/image">several others</a>.
</p>
<p>
A typical workspace contains many source repositories containing many
packages and commands. Most Go programmers keep <i>all</i> their Go source code
and dependencies in a single workspace.
</p>
<p>
Commands and libraries are built from different kinds of source packages.
We will discuss the distinction <a href="#PackageNames">later</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="GOPATH">The <code>GOPATH</code> environment variable</h3>
<p>
The <code>GOPATH</code> environment variable specifies the location of your
workspace. It defaults to a directory named <code>go</code> inside your home directory,
so <code>$HOME/go</code> on Unix,
<code>$home/go</code> on Plan 9,
and <code>%USERPROFILE%\go</code> (usually <code>C:\Users\YourName\go</code>) on Windows.
</p>
<p>
If you would like to work in a different location, you will need to
<a href="https://golang.org/wiki/SettingGOPATH">set <code>GOPATH</code></a>
to the path to that directory.
(Another common setup is to set <code>GOPATH=$HOME</code>.)
Note that <code>GOPATH</code> must <b>not</b> be the
same path as your Go installation.
</p>
<p>
The command <code>go</code> <code>env</code> <code>GOPATH</code>
prints the effective current <code>GOPATH</code>;
it prints the default location if the environment variable is unset.
</p>
<p>
For convenience, add the workspace's <code>bin</code> subdirectory
to your <code>PATH</code>:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>export PATH=$PATH:$(go env GOPATH)/bin</b>
</pre>
<p>
The scripts in the rest of this document use <code>$GOPATH</code>
instead of <code>$(go env GOPATH)</code> for brevity.
To make the scripts run as written
if you have not set GOPATH,
you can substitute $HOME/go in those commands
or else run:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>export GOPATH=$(go env GOPATH)</b>
</pre>
<p>
To learn more about the <code>GOPATH</code> environment variable, see
<a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-GOPATH_environment_variable"><code>'go help gopath'</code></a>.
</p>
<p>
To use a custom workspace location,
<a href="https://golang.org/wiki/SettingGOPATH">set the <code>GOPATH</code> environment variable</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="ImportPaths">Import paths</h3>
<p>
An <i>import path</i> is a string that uniquely identifies a package.
A package's import path corresponds to its location inside a workspace
or in a remote repository (explained below).
</p>
<p>
The packages from the standard library are given short import paths such as
<code>"fmt"</code> and <code>"net/http"</code>.
For your own packages, you must choose a base path that is unlikely to
collide with future additions to the standard library or other external
libraries.
</p>
<p>
If you keep your code in a source repository somewhere, then you should use the
root of that source repository as your base path.
For instance, if you have a <a href="https://github.com/">GitHub</a> account at
<code>github.com/user</code>, that should be your base path.
</p>
<p>
Note that you don't need to publish your code to a remote repository before you
can build it. It's just a good habit to organize your code as if you will
publish it someday. In practice you can choose any arbitrary path name,
as long as it is unique to the standard library and greater Go ecosystem.
</p>
<p>
We'll use <code>github.com/user</code> as our base path. Create a directory
inside your workspace in which to keep source code:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/user</b>
</pre>
<h3 id="Command">Your first program</h3>
<p>
To compile and run a simple program, first choose a package path (we'll use
<code>github.com/user/hello</code>) and create a corresponding package directory
inside your workspace:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>mkdir $GOPATH/src/github.com/user/hello</b>
</pre>
<p>
Next, create a file named <code>hello.go</code> inside that directory,
containing the following Go code.
</p>
<pre>
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Printf("Hello, world.\n")
}
</pre>
<p>
Now you can build and install that program with the <code>go</code> tool:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go install github.com/user/hello</b>
</pre>
<p>
Note that you can run this command from anywhere on your system. The
<code>go</code> tool finds the source code by looking for the
<code>github.com/user/hello</code> package inside the workspace specified by
<code>GOPATH</code>.
</p>
<p>
You can also omit the package path if you run <code>go install</code> from the
package directory:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/user/hello</b>
$ <b>go install</b>
</pre>
<p>
This command builds the <code>hello</code> command, producing an executable
binary. It then installs that binary to the workspace's <code>bin</code>
directory as <code>hello</code> (or, under Windows, <code>hello.exe</code>).
In our example, that will be <code>$GOPATH/bin/hello</code>, which is
<code>$HOME/go/bin/hello</code>.
</p>
<p>
The <code>go</code> tool will only print output when an error occurs, so if
these commands produce no output they have executed successfully.
</p>
<p>
You can now run the program by typing its full path at the command line:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>$GOPATH/bin/hello</b>
Hello, world.
</pre>
<p>
Or, as you have added <code>$GOPATH/bin</code> to your <code>PATH</code>,
just type the binary name:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>hello</b>
Hello, world.
</pre>
<p>
If you're using a source control system, now would be a good time to initialize
a repository, add the files, and commit your first change. Again, this step is
optional: you do not need to use source control to write Go code.
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/user/hello</b>
$ <b>git init</b>
Initialized empty Git repository in /home/user/work/src/github.com/user/hello/.git/
$ <b>git add hello.go</b>
$ <b>git commit -m "initial commit"</b>
[master (root-commit) 0b4507d] initial commit
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
create mode 100644 hello.go
</pre>
<p>
Pushing the code to a remote repository is left as an exercise for the reader.
</p>
<h3 id="Library">Your first library</h3>
<p>
Let's write a library and use it from the <code>hello</code> program.
</p>
<p>
Again, the first step is to choose a package path (we'll use
<code>github.com/user/stringutil</code>) and create the package directory:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>mkdir $GOPATH/src/github.com/user/stringutil</b>
</pre>
<p>
Next, create a file named <code>reverse.go</code> in that directory with the
following contents.
</p>
<pre>
// Package stringutil contains utility functions for working with strings.
package stringutil
// Reverse returns its argument string reversed rune-wise left to right.
func Reverse(s string) string {
r := []rune(s)
for i, j := 0, len(r)-1; i &lt; len(r)/2; i, j = i+1, j-1 {
r[i], r[j] = r[j], r[i]
}
return string(r)
}
</pre>
<p>
Now, test that the package compiles with <code>go build</code>:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go build github.com/user/stringutil</b>
</pre>
<p>
Or, if you are working in the package's source directory, just:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go build</b>
</pre>
<p>
This won't produce an output file. To do that, you must use <code>go
install</code>, which places the package object inside the <code>pkg</code>
directory of the workspace.
</p>
<p>
After confirming that the <code>stringutil</code> package builds,
modify your original <code>hello.go</code> (which is in
<code>$GOPATH/src/github.com/user/hello</code>) to use it:
</p>
<pre>
package main
import (
"fmt"
<b>"github.com/user/stringutil"</b>
)
func main() {
fmt.Printf(stringutil.Reverse("!oG ,olleH"))
}
</pre>
<p>
Whenever the <code>go</code> tool installs a package or binary, it also
installs whatever dependencies it has.
So when you install the <code>hello</code> program
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go install github.com/user/hello</b>
</pre>
<p>
the <code>stringutil</code> package will be installed as well, automatically.
</p>
<p>
Running the new version of the program, you should see a new, reversed message:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>hello</b>
Hello, Go!
</pre>
<p>
After the steps above, your workspace should look like this:
</p>
<pre>
bin/
hello # command executable
pkg/
linux_amd64/ # this will reflect your OS and architecture
github.com/user/
stringutil.a # package object
src/
github.com/user/
hello/
hello.go # command source
stringutil/
reverse.go # package source
</pre>
<p>
Note that <code>go install</code> placed the <code>stringutil.a</code> object
in a directory inside <code>pkg/linux_amd64</code> that mirrors its source
directory.
This is so that future invocations of the <code>go</code> tool can find the
package object and avoid recompiling the package unnecessarily.
The <code>linux_amd64</code> part is there to aid in cross-compilation,
and will reflect the operating system and architecture of your system.
</p>
<p>
Go command executables are statically linked; the package objects need not
be present to run Go programs.
</p>
<h3 id="PackageNames">Package names</h3>
<p>
The first statement in a Go source file must be
</p>
<pre>
package <i>name</i>
</pre>
<p>
where <code><i>name</i></code> is the package's default name for imports.
(All files in a package must use the same <code><i>name</i></code>.)
</p>
<p>
Go's convention is that the package name is the last element of the
import path: the package imported as "<code>crypto/rot13</code>"
should be named <code>rot13</code>.
</p>
<p>
Executable commands must always use <code>package main</code>.
</p>
<p>
There is no requirement that package names be unique
across all packages linked into a single binary,
only that the import paths (their full file names) be unique.
</p>
<p>
See <a href="/doc/effective_go.html#names">Effective Go</a> to learn more about
Go's naming conventions.
</p>
<h2 id="Testing">Testing</h2>
<p>
Go has a lightweight test framework composed of the <code>go test</code>
command and the <code>testing</code> package.
</p>
<p>
You write a test by creating a file with a name ending in <code>_test.go</code>
that contains functions named <code>TestXXX</code> with signature
<code>func (t *testing.T)</code>.
The test framework runs each such function;
if the function calls a failure function such as <code>t.Error</code> or
<code>t.Fail</code>, the test is considered to have failed.
</p>
<p>
Add a test to the <code>stringutil</code> package by creating the file
<code>$GOPATH/src/github.com/user/stringutil/reverse_test.go</code> containing
the following Go code.
</p>
<pre>
package stringutil
import "testing"
func TestReverse(t *testing.T) {
cases := []struct {
in, want string
}{
{"Hello, world", "dlrow ,olleH"},
{"Hello, 世界", "界世 ,olleH"},
{"", ""},
}
for _, c := range cases {
got := Reverse(c.in)
if got != c.want {
t.Errorf("Reverse(%q) == %q, want %q", c.in, got, c.want)
}
}
}
</pre>
<p>
Then run the test with <code>go test</code>:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go test github.com/user/stringutil</b>
ok github.com/user/stringutil 0.165s
</pre>
<p>
As always, if you are running the <code>go</code> tool from the package
directory, you can omit the package path:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go test</b>
ok github.com/user/stringutil 0.165s
</pre>
<p>
Run <code><a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Test_packages">go help test</a></code> and see the
<a href="/pkg/testing/">testing package documentation</a> for more detail.
</p>
<h2 id="remote">Remote packages</h2>
<p>
An import path can describe how to obtain the package source code using a
revision control system such as Git or Mercurial. The <code>go</code> tool uses
this property to automatically fetch packages from remote repositories.
For instance, the examples described in this document are also kept in a
Git repository hosted at GitHub
<code><a href="https://github.com/golang/example">github.com/golang/example</a></code>.
If you include the repository URL in the package's import path,
<code>go get</code> will fetch, build, and install it automatically:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>go get github.com/golang/example/hello</b>
$ <b>$GOPATH/bin/hello</b>
Hello, Go examples!
</pre>
<p>
If the specified package is not present in a workspace, <code>go get</code>
will place it inside the first workspace specified by <code>GOPATH</code>.
(If the package does already exist, <code>go get</code> skips the remote
fetch and behaves the same as <code>go install</code>.)
</p>
<p>
After issuing the above <code>go get</code> command, the workspace directory
tree should now look like this:
</p>
<pre>
bin/
hello # command executable
pkg/
linux_amd64/
github.com/golang/example/
stringutil.a # package object
github.com/user/
stringutil.a # package object
src/
github.com/golang/example/
.git/ # Git repository metadata
hello/
hello.go # command source
stringutil/
reverse.go # package source
reverse_test.go # test source
github.com/user/
hello/
hello.go # command source
stringutil/
reverse.go # package source
reverse_test.go # test source
</pre>
<p>
The <code>hello</code> command hosted at GitHub depends on the
<code>stringutil</code> package within the same repository. The imports in
<code>hello.go</code> file use the same import path convention, so the
<code>go get</code> command is able to locate and install the dependent
package, too.
</p>
<pre>
import "github.com/golang/example/stringutil"
</pre>
<p>
This convention is the easiest way to make your Go packages available for
others to use.
The <a href="//golang.org/wiki/Projects">Go Wiki</a>
and <a href="//godoc.org/">godoc.org</a>
provide lists of external Go projects.
</p>
<p>
For more information on using remote repositories with the <code>go</code> tool, see
<code><a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Remote_import_paths">go help importpath</a></code>.
</p>
<h2 id="next">What's next</h2>
<p>
Subscribe to the
<a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-announce">golang-announce</a>
mailing list to be notified when a new stable version of Go is released.
</p>
<p>
See <a href="/doc/effective_go.html">Effective Go</a> for tips on writing
clear, idiomatic Go code.
</p>
<p>
Take <a href="//tour.golang.org/">A Tour of Go</a> to learn the language
proper.
</p>
<p>
Visit the <a href="/doc/#articles">documentation page</a> for a set of in-depth
articles about the Go language and its libraries and tools.
</p>
<h2 id="help">Getting help</h2>
<p>
For real-time help, ask the helpful gophers in <code>#go-nuts</code> on the
<a href="http://freenode.net/">Freenode</a> IRC server.
</p>
<p>
The official mailing list for discussion of the Go language is
<a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-nuts">Go Nuts</a>.
</p>
<p>
Report bugs using the
<a href="//golang.org/issue">Go issue tracker</a>.
</p>

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/*
Copyright 2010 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.
*/
#codewalk-main {
text-align: left;
width: 100%;
overflow: auto;
}
#code-display {
border: 0;
width: 100%;
}
.setting {
font-size: 8pt;
color: #888888;
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text-decoration: underline;
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/* Style for Comments (the left-hand column) */
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margin: 0pt;
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cursor: pointer;
font-size: 16px;
border: 2px solid #ba9836;
margin-bottom: 10px;
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margin-bottom: 0px;
}
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margin-left: 10px;
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}
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}
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border-left-width: 12px;
margin-left: 0px;
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display: none;
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}
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}
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background-color: #f8f8ff;
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overflow: auto;
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padding-bottom: 5px;
font-size: small;
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// Copyright 2010 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.
/**
* A class to hold information about the Codewalk Viewer.
* @param {jQuery} context The top element in whose context the viewer should
* operate. It will not touch any elements above this one.
* @constructor
*/
var CodewalkViewer = function(context) {
this.context = context;
/**
* The div that contains all of the comments and their controls.
*/
this.commentColumn = this.context.find('#comment-column');
/**
* The div that contains the comments proper.
*/
this.commentArea = this.context.find('#comment-area');
/**
* The div that wraps the iframe with the code, as well as the drop down menu
* listing the different files.
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.codeColumn = this.context.find('#code-column');
/**
* The div that contains the code but excludes the options strip.
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.codeArea = this.context.find('#code-area');
/**
* The iframe that holds the code (from Sourcerer).
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.codeDisplay = this.context.find('#code-display');
/**
* The overlaid div used as a grab handle for sizing the code/comment panes.
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.sizer = this.context.find('#sizer');
/**
* The full-screen overlay that ensures we don't lose track of the mouse
* while dragging.
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.overlay = this.context.find('#overlay');
/**
* The hidden input field that we use to hold the focus so that we can detect
* shortcut keypresses.
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.shortcutInput = this.context.find('#shortcut-input');
/**
* The last comment that was selected.
* @type {jQuery}
*/
this.lastSelected = null;
};
/**
* Minimum width of the comments or code pane, in pixels.
* @type {number}
*/
CodewalkViewer.MIN_PANE_WIDTH = 200;
/**
* Navigate the code iframe to the given url and update the code popout link.
* @param {string} url The target URL.
* @param {Object} opt_window Window dependency injection for testing only.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.navigateToCode = function(url, opt_window) {
if (!opt_window) opt_window = window;
// Each iframe is represented by two distinct objects in the DOM: an iframe
// object and a window object. These do not expose the same capabilities.
// Here we need to get the window representation to get the location member,
// so we access it directly through window[] since jQuery returns the iframe
// representation.
// We replace location rather than set so as not to create a history for code
// navigation.
opt_window['code-display'].location.replace(url);
var k = url.indexOf('&');
if (k != -1) url = url.slice(0, k);
k = url.indexOf('fileprint=');
if (k != -1) url = url.slice(k+10, url.length);
this.context.find('#code-popout-link').attr('href', url);
};
/**
* Selects the first comment from the list and forces a refresh of the code
* view.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.selectFirstComment = function() {
// TODO(rsc): handle case where there are no comments
var firstSourcererLink = this.context.find('.comment:first');
this.changeSelectedComment(firstSourcererLink);
};
/**
* Sets the target on all links nested inside comments to be _blank.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.targetCommentLinksAtBlank = function() {
this.context.find('.comment a[href], #description a[href]').each(function() {
if (!this.target) this.target = '_blank';
});
};
/**
* Installs event handlers for all the events we care about.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.installEventHandlers = function() {
var self = this;
this.context.find('.comment')
.click(function(event) {
if (jQuery(event.target).is('a[href]')) return true;
self.changeSelectedComment(jQuery(this));
return false;
});
this.context.find('#code-selector')
.change(function() {self.navigateToCode(jQuery(this).val());});
this.context.find('#description-table .quote-feet.setting')
.click(function() {self.toggleDescription(jQuery(this)); return false;});
this.sizer
.mousedown(function(ev) {self.startSizerDrag(ev); return false;});
this.overlay
.mouseup(function(ev) {self.endSizerDrag(ev); return false;})
.mousemove(function(ev) {self.handleSizerDrag(ev); return false;});
this.context.find('#prev-comment')
.click(function() {
self.changeSelectedComment(self.lastSelected.prev()); return false;
});
this.context.find('#next-comment')
.click(function() {
self.changeSelectedComment(self.lastSelected.next()); return false;
});
// Workaround for Firefox 2 and 3, which steal focus from the main document
// whenever the iframe content is (re)loaded. The input field is not shown,
// but is a way for us to bring focus back to a place where we can detect
// keypresses.
this.context.find('#code-display')
.load(function(ev) {self.shortcutInput.focus();});
jQuery(document).keypress(function(ev) {
switch(ev.which) {
case 110: // 'n'
self.changeSelectedComment(self.lastSelected.next());
return false;
case 112: // 'p'
self.changeSelectedComment(self.lastSelected.prev());
return false;
default: // ignore
}
});
window.onresize = function() {self.updateHeight();};
};
/**
* Starts dragging the pane sizer.
* @param {Object} ev The mousedown event that started us dragging.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.startSizerDrag = function(ev) {
this.initialCodeWidth = this.codeColumn.width();
this.initialCommentsWidth = this.commentColumn.width();
this.initialMouseX = ev.pageX;
this.overlay.show();
};
/**
* Handles dragging the pane sizer.
* @param {Object} ev The mousemove event updating dragging position.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.handleSizerDrag = function(ev) {
var delta = ev.pageX - this.initialMouseX;
if (this.codeColumn.is('.right')) delta = -delta;
var proposedCodeWidth = this.initialCodeWidth + delta;
var proposedCommentWidth = this.initialCommentsWidth - delta;
var mw = CodewalkViewer.MIN_PANE_WIDTH;
if (proposedCodeWidth < mw) delta = mw - this.initialCodeWidth;
if (proposedCommentWidth < mw) delta = this.initialCommentsWidth - mw;
proposedCodeWidth = this.initialCodeWidth + delta;
proposedCommentWidth = this.initialCommentsWidth - delta;
// If window is too small, don't even try to resize.
if (proposedCodeWidth < mw || proposedCommentWidth < mw) return;
this.codeColumn.width(proposedCodeWidth);
this.commentColumn.width(proposedCommentWidth);
this.options.codeWidth = parseInt(
this.codeColumn.width() /
(this.codeColumn.width() + this.commentColumn.width()) * 100);
this.context.find('#code-column-width').text(this.options.codeWidth + '%');
};
/**
* Ends dragging the pane sizer.
* @param {Object} ev The mouseup event that caused us to stop dragging.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.endSizerDrag = function(ev) {
this.overlay.hide();
this.updateHeight();
};
/**
* Toggles the Codewalk description between being shown and hidden.
* @param {jQuery} target The target that was clicked to trigger this function.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.toggleDescription = function(target) {
var description = this.context.find('#description');
description.toggle();
target.find('span').text(description.is(':hidden') ? 'show' : 'hide');
this.updateHeight();
};
/**
* Changes the side of the window on which the code is shown and saves the
* setting in a cookie.
* @param {string?} codeSide The side on which the code should be, either
* 'left' or 'right'.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.changeCodeSide = function(codeSide) {
var commentSide = codeSide == 'left' ? 'right' : 'left';
this.context.find('#set-code-' + codeSide).addClass('selected');
this.context.find('#set-code-' + commentSide).removeClass('selected');
// Remove previous side class and add new one.
this.codeColumn.addClass(codeSide).removeClass(commentSide);
this.commentColumn.addClass(commentSide).removeClass(codeSide);
this.sizer.css(codeSide, 'auto').css(commentSide, 0);
this.options.codeSide = codeSide;
};
/**
* Adds selected class to newly selected comment, removes selected style from
* previously selected comment, changes drop down options so that the correct
* file is selected, and updates the code popout link.
* @param {jQuery} target The target that was clicked to trigger this function.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.changeSelectedComment = function(target) {
var currentFile = target.find('.comment-link').attr('href');
if (!currentFile) return;
if (!(this.lastSelected && this.lastSelected.get(0) === target.get(0))) {
if (this.lastSelected) this.lastSelected.removeClass('selected');
target.addClass('selected');
this.lastSelected = target;
var targetTop = target.position().top;
var parentTop = target.parent().position().top;
if (targetTop + target.height() > parentTop + target.parent().height() ||
targetTop < parentTop) {
var delta = targetTop - parentTop;
target.parent().animate(
{'scrollTop': target.parent().scrollTop() + delta},
Math.max(delta / 2, 200), 'swing');
}
var fname = currentFile.match(/(?:select=|fileprint=)\/[^&]+/)[0];
fname = fname.slice(fname.indexOf('=')+2, fname.length);
this.context.find('#code-selector').val(fname);
this.context.find('#prev-comment').toggleClass(
'disabled', !target.prev().length);
this.context.find('#next-comment').toggleClass(
'disabled', !target.next().length);
}
// Force original file even if user hasn't changed comments since they may
// have nagivated away from it within the iframe without us knowing.
this.navigateToCode(currentFile);
};
/**
* Updates the viewer by changing the height of the comments and code so that
* they fit within the height of the window. The function is typically called
* after the user changes the window size.
*/
CodewalkViewer.prototype.updateHeight = function() {
var windowHeight = jQuery(window).height() - 5 // GOK
var areaHeight = windowHeight - this.codeArea.offset().top
var footerHeight = this.context.find('#footer').outerHeight(true)
this.commentArea.height(areaHeight - footerHeight - this.context.find('#comment-options').outerHeight(true))
var codeHeight = areaHeight - footerHeight - 15 // GOK
this.codeArea.height(codeHeight)
this.codeDisplay.height(codeHeight - this.codeDisplay.offset().top + this.codeArea.offset().top);
this.sizer.height(codeHeight);
};
window.initFuncs.push(function() {
var viewer = new CodewalkViewer(jQuery('#codewalk-main'));
viewer.selectFirstComment();
viewer.targetCommentLinksAtBlank();
viewer.installEventHandlers();
viewer.updateHeight();
});

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<codewalk title="How to Write a Codewalk">
<step title="Introduction" src="doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml">
A codewalk is a guided tour through a piece of code.
It consists of a sequence of steps, each typically explaining
a highlighted section of code.
<br/><br/>
The <a href="/cmd/godoc">godoc</a> web server translates
an XML file like the one in the main window pane into the HTML
page that you're viewing now.
<br/><br/>
The codewalk with URL path <code>/doc/codewalk/</code><i>name</i>
is loaded from the input file <code>$GOROOT/doc/codewalk/</code><i>name</i><code>.xml</code>.
<br/><br/>
This codewalk explains how to write a codewalk by examining
its own source code,
<code><a href="/doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml">$GOROOT/doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml</a></code>,
shown in the main window pane to the left.
</step>
<step title="Title" src="doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml:/title=/">
The codewalk input file is an XML file containing a single
<code>&lt;codewalk&gt;</code> element.
That element's <code>title</code> attribute gives the title
that is used both on the codewalk page and in the codewalk list.
</step>
<step title="Steps" src="doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml:/&lt;step/,/step&gt;/">
Each step in the codewalk is a <code>&lt;step&gt;</code> element
nested inside the main <code>&lt;codewalk&gt;</code>.
The step element's <code>title</code> attribute gives the step's title,
which is shown in a shaded bar above the main step text.
The element's <code>src</code> attribute specifies the source
code to show in the main window pane and, optionally, a range of
lines to highlight.
<br/><br/>
The first step in this codewalk does not highlight any lines:
its <code>src</code> is just a file name.
</step>
<step title="Specifying a source line" src='doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml:/title="Title"/'>
The most complex part of the codewalk specification is
saying what lines to highlight.
Instead of ordinary line numbers,
the codewalk uses an address syntax that makes it possible
to describe the match by its content.
As the file gets edited, this descriptive address has a better
chance to continue to refer to the right section of the file.
<br/><br/>
To specify a source line, use a <code>src</code> attribute of the form
<i>filename</i><code>:</code><i>address</i>,
where <i>address</i> is an address in the syntax used by the text editors <i>sam</i> and <i>acme</i>.
<br/><br/>
The simplest address is a single regular expression.
The highlighted line in the main window pane shows that the
address for the &ldquo;Title&rdquo; step was <code>/title=/</code>,
which matches the first instance of that <a href="/pkg/regexp">regular expression</a> (<code>title=</code>) in the file.
</step>
<step title="Specifying a source range" src='doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml:/title="Steps"/'>
To highlight a range of source lines, the simplest address to use is
a pair of regular expressions
<code>/</code><i>regexp1</i><code>/,/</code><i>regexp2</i><code>/</code>.
The highlight begins with the line containing the first match for <i>regexp1</i>
and ends with the line containing the first match for <i>regexp2</i>
after the end of the match for <i>regexp1</i>.
Ignoring the HTML quoting,
The line containing the first match for <i>regexp1</i> will be the first one highlighted,
and the line containing the first match for <i>regexp2</i>.
<br/><br/>
The address <code>/&lt;step/,/step&gt;/</code> looks for the first instance of
<code>&lt;step</code> in the file, and then starting after that point,
looks for the first instance of <code>step&gt;</code>.
(Click on the &ldquo;Steps&rdquo; step above to see the highlight in action.)
Note that the <code>&lt;</code> and <code>&gt;</code> had to be written
using XML escapes in order to be valid XML.
</step>
<step title="Advanced addressing" src="doc/codewalk/codewalk.xml:/Advanced/,/step&gt;/">
The <code>/</code><i>regexp</i><code>/</code>
and <code>/</code><i>regexp1</i><code>/,/</code><i>regexp2</i><code>/</code>
forms suffice for most highlighting.
<br/><br/>
The full address syntax is summarized in this table
(an excerpt of Table II from
<a href="https://9p.io/sys/doc/sam/sam.html">The text editor <code>sam</code></a>):
<br/><br/>
<table>
<tr><td colspan="2"><b>Simple addresses</b></td></tr>
<tr><td><code>#</code><i>n</i></td>
<td>The empty string after character <i>n</i></td></tr>
<tr><td><i>n</i></td>
<td>Line <i>n</i></td></tr>
<tr><td><code>/</code><i>regexp</i><code>/</code></td>
<td>The first following match of the regular expression</td></tr>
<!-- not supported (yet?)
<tr><td><code>/</code><i>regexp</i><code>/</code></td>
<td>The first previous match of the regular expression</td></tr>
-->
<tr><td><code>$</code></td>
<td>The null string at the end of the file</td></tr>
<tr><td colspan="2"><b>Compound addresses</b></td></tr>
<tr><td><i>a1</i><code>+</code><i>a2</i></td>
<td>The address <i>a2</i> evaluated starting at the right of <i>a1</i></td></tr>
<tr><td><i>a1</i><code>-</code><i>a2</i></td>
<td>The address <i>a2</i> evaluated in the reverse direction starting at the left of <i>a1</i></td></tr>
<tr><td><i>a1</i><code>,</code><i>a2</i></td>
<td>From the left of <i>a1</i> to the right of <i>a2</i> (default <code>0,$</code>).</td></tr>
</table>
</step>
</codewalk>

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<codewalk title="First-Class Functions in Go">
<step title="Introduction" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go">
Go supports first class functions, higher-order functions, user-defined
function types, function literals, closures, and multiple return values.
<br/><br/>
This rich feature set supports a functional programming style in a strongly
typed language.
<br/><br/>
In this codewalk we will look at a simple program that simulates a dice game
called <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_(dice)">Pig</a> and evaluates
basic strategies.
</step>
<step title="Game overview" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ A score/,/thisTurn int\n}/">
Pig is a two-player game played with a 6-sided die. Each turn, you may roll or stay.
<ul>
<li> If you roll a 1, you lose all points for your turn and play passes to
your opponent. Any other roll adds its value to your turn score. </li>
<li> If you stay, your turn score is added to your total score, and play passes
to your opponent. </li>
</ul>
The first person to reach 100 total points wins.
<br/><br/>
The <code>score</code> type stores the scores of the current and opposing
players, in addition to the points accumulated during the current turn.
</step>
<step title="User-defined function types" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ An action/,/bool\)/">
In Go, functions can be passed around just like any other value. A function's
type signature describes the types of its arguments and return values.
<br/><br/>
The <code>action</code> type is a function that takes a <code>score</code>
and returns the resulting <code>score</code> and whether the current turn is
over.
<br/><br/>
If the turn is over, the <code>player</code> and <code>opponent</code> fields
in the resulting <code>score</code> should be swapped, as it is now the other player's
turn.
</step>
<step title="Multiple return values" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ roll returns/,/true\n}/">
Go functions can return multiple values.
<br/><br/>
The functions <code>roll</code> and <code>stay</code> each return a pair of
values. They also match the <code>action</code> type signature. These
<code>action</code> functions define the rules of Pig.
</step>
<step title="Higher-order functions" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ A strategy/,/action\n/">
A function can use other functions as arguments and return values.
<br/><br/>
A <code>strategy</code> is a function that takes a <code>score</code> as input
and returns an <code>action</code> to perform. <br/>
(Remember, an <code>action</code> is itself a function.)
</step>
<step title="Function literals and closures" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/return func/,/return roll\n\t}/">
Anonymous functions can be declared in Go, as in this example. Function
literals are closures: they inherit the scope of the function in which they
are declared.
<br/><br/>
One basic strategy in Pig is to continue rolling until you have accumulated at
least k points in a turn, and then stay. The argument <code>k</code> is
enclosed by this function literal, which matches the <code>strategy</code> type
signature.
</step>
<step title="Simulating games" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ play/,/currentPlayer\n}/">
We simulate a game of Pig by calling an <code>action</code> to update the
<code>score</code> until one player reaches 100 points. Each
<code>action</code> is selected by calling the <code>strategy</code> function
associated with the current player.
</step>
<step title="Simulating a tournament" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ roundRobin/,/gamesPerStrategy\n}/">
The <code>roundRobin</code> function simulates a tournament and tallies wins.
Each strategy plays each other strategy <code>gamesPerSeries</code> times.
</step>
<step title="Variadic function declarations" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/\/\/ ratioS/,/string {/">
Variadic functions like <code>ratioString</code> take a variable number of
arguments. These arguments are available as a slice inside the function.
</step>
<step title="Simulation results" src="doc/codewalk/pig.go:/func main/,/\n}/">
The <code>main</code> function defines 100 basic strategies, simulates a round
robin tournament, and then prints the win/loss record of each strategy.
<br/><br/>
Among these strategies, staying at 25 is best, but the <a
href="http://www.google.com/search?q=optimal+play+pig">optimal strategy for
Pig</a> is much more complex.
</step>
</codewalk>

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// Copyright 2011 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.
/*
Generating random text: a Markov chain algorithm
Based on the program presented in the "Design and Implementation" chapter
of The Practice of Programming (Kernighan and Pike, Addison-Wesley 1999).
See also Computer Recreations, Scientific American 260, 122 - 125 (1989).
A Markov chain algorithm generates text by creating a statistical model of
potential textual suffixes for a given prefix. Consider this text:
I am not a number! I am a free man!
Our Markov chain algorithm would arrange this text into this set of prefixes
and suffixes, or "chain": (This table assumes a prefix length of two words.)
Prefix Suffix
"" "" I
"" I am
I am a
I am not
a free man!
am a free
am not a
a number! I
number! I am
not a number!
To generate text using this table we select an initial prefix ("I am", for
example), choose one of the suffixes associated with that prefix at random
with probability determined by the input statistics ("a"),
and then create a new prefix by removing the first word from the prefix
and appending the suffix (making the new prefix is "am a"). Repeat this process
until we can't find any suffixes for the current prefix or we exceed the word
limit. (The word limit is necessary as the chain table may contain cycles.)
Our version of this program reads text from standard input, parsing it into a
Markov chain, and writes generated text to standard output.
The prefix and output lengths can be specified using the -prefix and -words
flags on the command-line.
*/
package main
import (
"bufio"
"flag"
"fmt"
"io"
"math/rand"
"os"
"strings"
"time"
)
// Prefix is a Markov chain prefix of one or more words.
type Prefix []string
// String returns the Prefix as a string (for use as a map key).
func (p Prefix) String() string {
return strings.Join(p, " ")
}
// Shift removes the first word from the Prefix and appends the given word.
func (p Prefix) Shift(word string) {
copy(p, p[1:])
p[len(p)-1] = word
}
// Chain contains a map ("chain") of prefixes to a list of suffixes.
// A prefix is a string of prefixLen words joined with spaces.
// A suffix is a single word. A prefix can have multiple suffixes.
type Chain struct {
chain map[string][]string
prefixLen int
}
// NewChain returns a new Chain with prefixes of prefixLen words.
func NewChain(prefixLen int) *Chain {
return &Chain{make(map[string][]string), prefixLen}
}
// Build reads text from the provided Reader and
// parses it into prefixes and suffixes that are stored in Chain.
func (c *Chain) Build(r io.Reader) {
br := bufio.NewReader(r)
p := make(Prefix, c.prefixLen)
for {
var s string
if _, err := fmt.Fscan(br, &s); err != nil {
break
}
key := p.String()
c.chain[key] = append(c.chain[key], s)
p.Shift(s)
}
}
// Generate returns a string of at most n words generated from Chain.
func (c *Chain) Generate(n int) string {
p := make(Prefix, c.prefixLen)
var words []string
for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
choices := c.chain[p.String()]
if len(choices) == 0 {
break
}
next := choices[rand.Intn(len(choices))]
words = append(words, next)
p.Shift(next)
}
return strings.Join(words, " ")
}
func main() {
// Register command-line flags.
numWords := flag.Int("words", 100, "maximum number of words to print")
prefixLen := flag.Int("prefix", 2, "prefix length in words")
flag.Parse() // Parse command-line flags.
rand.Seed(time.Now().UnixNano()) // Seed the random number generator.
c := NewChain(*prefixLen) // Initialize a new Chain.
c.Build(os.Stdin) // Build chains from standard input.
text := c.Generate(*numWords) // Generate text.
fmt.Println(text) // Write text to standard output.
}

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<!--
Copyright 2011 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.
-->
<codewalk title="Generating arbitrary text: a Markov chain algorithm">
<step title="Introduction" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/Generating/,/line\./">
This codewalk describes a program that generates random text using
a Markov chain algorithm. The package comment describes the algorithm
and the operation of the program. Please read it before continuing.
</step>
<step title="Modeling Markov chains" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/ chain/">
A chain consists of a prefix and a suffix. Each prefix is a set
number of words, while a suffix is a single word.
A prefix can have an arbitrary number of suffixes.
To model this data, we use a <code>map[string][]string</code>.
Each map key is a prefix (a <code>string</code>) and its values are
lists of suffixes (a slice of strings, <code>[]string</code>).
<br/><br/>
Here is the example table from the package comment
as modeled by this data structure:
<pre>
map[string][]string{
" ": {"I"},
" I": {"am"},
"I am": {"a", "not"},
"a free": {"man!"},
"am a": {"free"},
"am not": {"a"},
"a number!": {"I"},
"number! I": {"am"},
"not a": {"number!"},
}</pre>
While each prefix consists of multiple words, we
store prefixes in the map as a single <code>string</code>.
It would seem more natural to store the prefix as a
<code>[]string</code>, but we can't do this with a map because the
key type of a map must implement equality (and slices do not).
<br/><br/>
Therefore, in most of our code we will model prefixes as a
<code>[]string</code> and join the strings together with a space
to generate the map key:
<pre>
Prefix Map key
[]string{"", ""} " "
[]string{"", "I"} " I"
[]string{"I", "am"} "I am"
</pre>
</step>
<step title="The Chain struct" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/type Chain/,/}/">
The complete state of the chain table consists of the table itself and
the word length of the prefixes. The <code>Chain</code> struct stores
this data.
</step>
<step title="The NewChain constructor function" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/func New/,/\n}/">
The <code>Chain</code> struct has two unexported fields (those that
do not begin with an upper case character), and so we write a
<code>NewChain</code> constructor function that initializes the
<code>chain</code> map with <code>make</code> and sets the
<code>prefixLen</code> field.
<br/><br/>
This is constructor function is not strictly necessary as this entire
program is within a single package (<code>main</code>) and therefore
there is little practical difference between exported and unexported
fields. We could just as easily write out the contents of this function
when we want to construct a new Chain.
But using these unexported fields is good practice; it clearly denotes
that only methods of Chain and its constructor function should access
those fields. Also, structuring <code>Chain</code> like this means we
could easily move it into its own package at some later date.
</step>
<step title="The Prefix type" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/type Prefix/">
Since we'll be working with prefixes often, we define a
<code>Prefix</code> type with the concrete type <code>[]string</code>.
Defining a named type clearly allows us to be explicit when we are
working with a prefix instead of just a <code>[]string</code>.
Also, in Go we can define methods on any named type (not just structs),
so we can add methods that operate on <code>Prefix</code> if we need to.
</step>
<step title="The String method" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/func[^\n]+String/,/}/">
The first method we define on <code>Prefix</code> is
<code>String</code>. It returns a <code>string</code> representation
of a <code>Prefix</code> by joining the slice elements together with
spaces. We will use this method to generate keys when working with
the chain map.
</step>
<step title="Building the chain" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/func[^\n]+Build/,/\n}/">
The <code>Build</code> method reads text from an <code>io.Reader</code>
and parses it into prefixes and suffixes that are stored in the
<code>Chain</code>.
<br/><br/>
The <code><a href="/pkg/io/#Reader">io.Reader</a></code> is an
interface type that is widely used by the standard library and
other Go code. Our code uses the
<code><a href="/pkg/fmt/#Fscan">fmt.Fscan</a></code> function, which
reads space-separated values from an <code>io.Reader</code>.
<br/><br/>
The <code>Build</code> method returns once the <code>Reader</code>'s
<code>Read</code> method returns <code>io.EOF</code> (end of file)
or some other read error occurs.
</step>
<step title="Buffering the input" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/bufio\.NewReader/">
This function does many small reads, which can be inefficient for some
<code>Readers</code>. For efficiency we wrap the provided
<code>io.Reader</code> with
<code><a href="/pkg/bufio/">bufio.NewReader</a></code> to create a
new <code>io.Reader</code> that provides buffering.
</step>
<step title="The Prefix variable" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/make\(Prefix/">
At the top of the function we make a <code>Prefix</code> slice
<code>p</code> using the <code>Chain</code>'s <code>prefixLen</code>
field as its length.
We'll use this variable to hold the current prefix and mutate it with
each new word we encounter.
</step>
<step title="Scanning words" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/var s string/,/\n }/">
In our loop we read words from the <code>Reader</code> into a
<code>string</code> variable <code>s</code> using
<code>fmt.Fscan</code>. Since <code>Fscan</code> uses space to
separate each input value, each call will yield just one word
(including punctuation), which is exactly what we need.
<br/><br/>
<code>Fscan</code> returns an error if it encounters a read error
(<code>io.EOF</code>, for example) or if it can't scan the requested
value (in our case, a single string). In either case we just want to
stop scanning, so we <code>break</code> out of the loop.
</step>
<step title="Adding a prefix and suffix to the chain" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/ key/,/key\], s\)">
The word stored in <code>s</code> is a new suffix. We add the new
prefix/suffix combination to the <code>chain</code> map by computing
the map key with <code>p.String</code> and appending the suffix
to the slice stored under that key.
<br/><br/>
The built-in <code>append</code> function appends elements to a slice
and allocates new storage when necessary. When the provided slice is
<code>nil</code>, <code>append</code> allocates a new slice.
This behavior conveniently ties in with the semantics of our map:
retrieving an unset key returns the zero value of the value type and
the zero value of <code>[]string</code> is <code>nil</code>.
When our program encounters a new prefix (yielding a <code>nil</code>
value in the map) <code>append</code> will allocate a new slice.
<br/><br/>
For more information about the <code>append</code> function and slices
in general see the
<a href="/doc/articles/slices_usage_and_internals.html">Slices: usage and internals</a> article.
</step>
<step title="Pushing the suffix onto the prefix" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/p\.Shift/">
Before reading the next word our algorithm requires us to drop the
first word from the prefix and push the current suffix onto the prefix.
<br/><br/>
When in this state
<pre>
p == Prefix{"I", "am"}
s == "not" </pre>
the new value for <code>p</code> would be
<pre>
p == Prefix{"am", "not"}</pre>
This operation is also required during text generation so we put
the code to perform this mutation of the slice inside a method on
<code>Prefix</code> named <code>Shift</code>.
</step>
<step title="The Shift method" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/func[^\n]+Shift/,/\n}/">
The <code>Shift</code> method uses the built-in <code>copy</code>
function to copy the last len(p)-1 elements of <code>p</code> to
the start of the slice, effectively moving the elements
one index to the left (if you consider zero as the leftmost index).
<pre>
p := Prefix{"I", "am"}
copy(p, p[1:])
// p == Prefix{"am", "am"}</pre>
We then assign the provided <code>word</code> to the last index
of the slice:
<pre>
// suffix == "not"
p[len(p)-1] = suffix
// p == Prefix{"am", "not"}</pre>
</step>
<step title="Generating text" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/func[^\n]+Generate/,/\n}/">
The <code>Generate</code> method is similar to <code>Build</code>
except that instead of reading words from a <code>Reader</code>
and storing them in a map, it reads words from the map and
appends them to a slice (<code>words</code>).
<br/><br/>
<code>Generate</code> uses a conditional for loop to generate
up to <code>n</code> words.
</step>
<step title="Getting potential suffixes" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/choices/,/}\n/">
At each iteration of the loop we retrieve a list of potential suffixes
for the current prefix. We access the <code>chain</code> map at key
<code>p.String()</code> and assign its contents to <code>choices</code>.
<br/><br/>
If <code>len(choices)</code> is zero we break out of the loop as there
are no potential suffixes for that prefix.
This test also works if the key isn't present in the map at all:
in that case, <code>choices</code> will be <code>nil</code> and the
length of a <code>nil</code> slice is zero.
</step>
<step title="Choosing a suffix at random" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/next := choices/,/Shift/">
To choose a suffix we use the
<code><a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Intn">rand.Intn</a></code> function.
It returns a random integer up to (but not including) the provided
value. Passing in <code>len(choices)</code> gives us a random index
into the full length of the list.
<br/><br/>
We use that index to pick our new suffix, assign it to
<code>next</code> and append it to the <code>words</code> slice.
<br/><br/>
Next, we <code>Shift</code> the new suffix onto the prefix just as
we did in the <code>Build</code> method.
</step>
<step title="Returning the generated text" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/Join\(words/">
Before returning the generated text as a string, we use the
<code>strings.Join</code> function to join the elements of
the <code>words</code> slice together, separated by spaces.
</step>
<step title="Command-line flags" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/Register command-line flags/,/prefixLen/">
To make it easy to tweak the prefix and generated text lengths we
use the <code><a href="/pkg/flag/">flag</a></code> package to parse
command-line flags.
<br/><br/>
These calls to <code>flag.Int</code> register new flags with the
<code>flag</code> package. The arguments to <code>Int</code> are the
flag name, its default value, and a description. The <code>Int</code>
function returns a pointer to an integer that will contain the
user-supplied value (or the default value if the flag was omitted on
the command-line).
</step>
<step title="Program set up" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/flag.Parse/,/rand.Seed/">
The <code>main</code> function begins by parsing the command-line
flags with <code>flag.Parse</code> and seeding the <code>rand</code>
package's random number generator with the current time.
<br/><br/>
If the command-line flags provided by the user are invalid the
<code>flag.Parse</code> function will print an informative usage
message and terminate the program.
</step>
<step title="Creating and building a new Chain" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/c := NewChain/,/c\.Build/">
To create the new <code>Chain</code> we call <code>NewChain</code>
with the value of the <code>prefix</code> flag.
<br/><br/>
To build the chain we call <code>Build</code> with
<code>os.Stdin</code> (which implements <code>io.Reader</code>) so
that it will read its input from standard input.
</step>
<step title="Generating and printing text" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go:/c\.Generate/,/fmt.Println/">
Finally, to generate text we call <code>Generate</code> with
the value of the <code>words</code> flag and assigning the result
to the variable <code>text</code>.
<br/><br/>
Then we call <code>fmt.Println</code> to write the text to standard
output, followed by a carriage return.
</step>
<step title="Using this program" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go">
To use this program, first build it with the
<a href="/cmd/go/">go</a> command:
<pre>
$ go build markov.go</pre>
And then execute it while piping in some input text:
<pre>
$ echo "a man a plan a canal panama" \
| ./markov -prefix=1
a plan a man a plan a canal panama</pre>
Here's a transcript of generating some text using the Go distribution's
README file as source material:
<pre>
$ ./markov -words=10 &lt; $GOROOT/README
This is the source code repository for the Go source
$ ./markov -prefix=1 -words=10 &lt; $GOROOT/README
This is the go directory (the one containing this README).
$ ./markov -prefix=1 -words=10 &lt; $GOROOT/README
This is the variable if you have just untarred a</pre>
</step>
<step title="An exercise for the reader" src="doc/codewalk/markov.go">
The <code>Generate</code> function does a lot of allocations when it
builds the <code>words</code> slice. As an exercise, modify it to
take an <code>io.Writer</code> to which it incrementally writes the
generated text with <code>Fprint</code>.
Aside from being more efficient this makes <code>Generate</code>
more symmetrical to <code>Build</code>.
</step>
</codewalk>

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// Copyright 2011 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
import (
"fmt"
"math/rand"
)
const (
win = 100 // The winning score in a game of Pig
gamesPerSeries = 10 // The number of games per series to simulate
)
// A score includes scores accumulated in previous turns for each player,
// as well as the points scored by the current player in this turn.
type score struct {
player, opponent, thisTurn int
}
// An action transitions stochastically to a resulting score.
type action func(current score) (result score, turnIsOver bool)
// roll returns the (result, turnIsOver) outcome of simulating a die roll.
// If the roll value is 1, then thisTurn score is abandoned, and the players'
// roles swap. Otherwise, the roll value is added to thisTurn.
func roll(s score) (score, bool) {
outcome := rand.Intn(6) + 1 // A random int in [1, 6]
if outcome == 1 {
return score{s.opponent, s.player, 0}, true
}
return score{s.player, s.opponent, outcome + s.thisTurn}, false
}
// stay returns the (result, turnIsOver) outcome of staying.
// thisTurn score is added to the player's score, and the players' roles swap.
func stay(s score) (score, bool) {
return score{s.opponent, s.player + s.thisTurn, 0}, true
}
// A strategy chooses an action for any given score.
type strategy func(score) action
// stayAtK returns a strategy that rolls until thisTurn is at least k, then stays.
func stayAtK(k int) strategy {
return func(s score) action {
if s.thisTurn >= k {
return stay
}
return roll
}
}
// play simulates a Pig game and returns the winner (0 or 1).
func play(strategy0, strategy1 strategy) int {
strategies := []strategy{strategy0, strategy1}
var s score
var turnIsOver bool
currentPlayer := rand.Intn(2) // Randomly decide who plays first
for s.player+s.thisTurn < win {
action := strategies[currentPlayer](s)
s, turnIsOver = action(s)
if turnIsOver {
currentPlayer = (currentPlayer + 1) % 2
}
}
return currentPlayer
}
// roundRobin simulates a series of games between every pair of strategies.
func roundRobin(strategies []strategy) ([]int, int) {
wins := make([]int, len(strategies))
for i := 0; i < len(strategies); i++ {
for j := i + 1; j < len(strategies); j++ {
for k := 0; k < gamesPerSeries; k++ {
winner := play(strategies[i], strategies[j])
if winner == 0 {
wins[i]++
} else {
wins[j]++
}
}
}
}
gamesPerStrategy := gamesPerSeries * (len(strategies) - 1) // no self play
return wins, gamesPerStrategy
}
// ratioString takes a list of integer values and returns a string that lists
// each value and its percentage of the sum of all values.
// e.g., ratios(1, 2, 3) = "1/6 (16.7%), 2/6 (33.3%), 3/6 (50.0%)"
func ratioString(vals ...int) string {
total := 0
for _, val := range vals {
total += val
}
s := ""
for _, val := range vals {
if s != "" {
s += ", "
}
pct := 100 * float64(val) / float64(total)
s += fmt.Sprintf("%d/%d (%0.1f%%)", val, total, pct)
}
return s
}
func main() {
strategies := make([]strategy, win)
for k := range strategies {
strategies[k] = stayAtK(k + 1)
}
wins, games := roundRobin(strategies)
for k := range strategies {
fmt.Printf("Wins, losses staying at k =% 4d: %s\n",
k+1, ratioString(wins[k], games-wins[k]))
}
}

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Copyright 2013 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.
set -e
function fail {
echo FAIL: doc/codewalk/$1
exit 1
}
# markov.xml
echo foo | go run markov.go | grep foo > /dev/null || fail markov
# functions.xml
go run pig.go | grep 'Wins, losses staying at k = 100: 210/990 (21.2%), 780/990 (78.8%)' > /dev/null || fail pig
# sharemem.xml: only build the example, as it uses the network
go build urlpoll.go || fail urlpoll
rm -f urlpoll

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<codewalk title="Share Memory By Communicating">
<step title="Introduction" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go">
Go's approach to concurrency differs from the traditional use of
threads and shared memory. Philosophically, it can be summarized:
<br/><br/>
<i>Don't communicate by sharing memory; share memory by communicating.</i>
<br/><br/>
Channels allow you to pass references to data structures between goroutines.
If you consider this as passing around ownership of the data (the ability to
read and write it), they become a powerful and expressive synchronization
mechanism.
<br/><br/>
In this codewalk we will look at a simple program that polls a list of
URLs, checking their HTTP response codes and periodically printing their state.
</step>
<step title="State type" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/State/,/}/">
The State type represents the state of a URL.
<br/><br/>
The Pollers send State values to the StateMonitor,
which maintains a map of the current state of each URL.
</step>
<step title="Resource type" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Resource/,/}/">
A Resource represents the state of a URL to be polled: the URL itself
and the number of errors encountered since the last successful poll.
<br/><br/>
When the program starts, it allocates one Resource for each URL.
The main goroutine and the Poller goroutines send the Resources to
each other on channels.
</step>
<step title="Poller function" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/func Poller/,/\n}/">
Each Poller receives Resource pointers from an input channel.
In this program, the convention is that sending a Resource pointer on
a channel passes ownership of the underlying data from the sender
to the receiver. Because of this convention, we know that
no two goroutines will access this Resource at the same time.
This means we don't have to worry about locking to prevent concurrent
access to these data structures.
<br/><br/>
The Poller processes the Resource by calling its Poll method.
<br/><br/>
It sends a State value to the status channel, to inform the StateMonitor
of the result of the Poll.
<br/><br/>
Finally, it sends the Resource pointer to the out channel. This can be
interpreted as the Poller saying &quot;I'm done with this Resource&quot; and
returning ownership of it to the main goroutine.
<br/><br/>
Several goroutines run Pollers, processing Resources in parallel.
</step>
<step title="The Poll method" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Poll executes/,/\n}/">
The Poll method (of the Resource type) performs an HTTP HEAD request
for the Resource's URL and returns the HTTP response's status code.
If an error occurs, Poll logs the message to standard error and returns the
error string instead.
</step>
<step title="main function" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/func main/,/\n}/">
The main function starts the Poller and StateMonitor goroutines
and then loops passing completed Resources back to the pending
channel after appropriate delays.
</step>
<step title="Creating channels" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Create our/,/complete/">
First, main makes two channels of *Resource, pending and complete.
<br/><br/>
Inside main, a new goroutine sends one Resource per URL to pending
and the main goroutine receives completed Resources from complete.
<br/><br/>
The pending and complete channels are passed to each of the Poller
goroutines, within which they are known as in and out.
</step>
<step title="Initializing StateMonitor" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Launch the StateMonitor/,/statusInterval/">
StateMonitor will initialize and launch a goroutine that stores the state
of each Resource. We will look at this function in detail later.
<br/><br/>
For now, the important thing to note is that it returns a channel of State,
which is saved as status and passed to the Poller goroutines.
</step>
<step title="Launching Poller goroutines" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Launch some Poller/,/}/">
Now that it has the necessary channels, main launches a number of
Poller goroutines, passing the channels as arguments.
The channels provide the means of communication between the main, Poller, and
StateMonitor goroutines.
</step>
<step title="Send Resources to pending" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Send some Resources/,/}\(\)/">
To add the initial work to the system, main starts a new goroutine
that allocates and sends one Resource per URL to pending.
<br/><br/>
The new goroutine is necessary because unbuffered channel sends and
receives are synchronous. That means these channel sends will block until
the Pollers are ready to read from pending.
<br/><br/>
Were these sends performed in the main goroutine with fewer Pollers than
channel sends, the program would reach a deadlock situation, because
main would not yet be receiving from complete.
<br/><br/>
Exercise for the reader: modify this part of the program to read a list of
URLs from a file. (You may want to move this goroutine into its own
named function.)
</step>
<step title="Main Event Loop" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/range complete/,/\n }/">
When a Poller is done with a Resource, it sends it on the complete channel.
This loop receives those Resource pointers from complete.
For each received Resource, it starts a new goroutine calling
the Resource's Sleep method. Using a new goroutine for each
ensures that the sleeps can happen in parallel.
<br/><br/>
Note that any single Resource pointer may only be sent on either pending or
complete at any one time. This ensures that a Resource is either being
handled by a Poller goroutine or sleeping, but never both simultaneously.
In this way, we share our Resource data by communicating.
</step>
<step title="The Sleep method" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/Sleep/,/\n}/">
Sleep calls time.Sleep to pause before sending the Resource to done.
The pause will either be of a fixed length (pollInterval) plus an
additional delay proportional to the number of sequential errors (r.errCount).
<br/><br/>
This is an example of a typical Go idiom: a function intended to run inside
a goroutine takes a channel, upon which it sends its return value
(or other indication of completed state).
</step>
<step title="StateMonitor" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/StateMonitor/,/\n}/">
The StateMonitor receives State values on a channel and periodically
outputs the state of all Resources being polled by the program.
</step>
<step title="The updates channel" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/updates :=/">
The variable updates is a channel of State, on which the Poller goroutines
send State values.
<br/><br/>
This channel is returned by the function.
</step>
<step title="The urlStatus map" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/urlStatus/">
The variable urlStatus is a map of URLs to their most recent status.
</step>
<step title="The Ticker object" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/ticker/">
A time.Ticker is an object that repeatedly sends a value on a channel at a
specified interval.
<br/><br/>
In this case, ticker triggers the printing of the current state to
standard output every updateInterval nanoseconds.
</step>
<step title="The StateMonitor goroutine" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go:/go func/,/}\(\)/">
StateMonitor will loop forever, selecting on two channels:
ticker.C and update. The select statement blocks until one of its
communications is ready to proceed.
<br/><br/>
When StateMonitor receives a tick from ticker.C, it calls logState to
print the current state. When it receives a State update from updates,
it records the new status in the urlStatus map.
<br/><br/>
Notice that this goroutine owns the urlStatus data structure,
ensuring that it can only be accessed sequentially.
This prevents memory corruption issues that might arise from parallel reads
and/or writes to a shared map.
</step>
<step title="Conclusion" src="doc/codewalk/urlpoll.go">
In this codewalk we have explored a simple example of using Go's concurrency
primitives to share memory through communication.
<br/><br/>
This should provide a starting point from which to explore the ways in which
goroutines and channels can be used to write expressive and concise concurrent
programs.
</step>
</codewalk>

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// Copyright 2010 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
import (
"log"
"net/http"
"time"
)
const (
numPollers = 2 // number of Poller goroutines to launch
pollInterval = 60 * time.Second // how often to poll each URL
statusInterval = 10 * time.Second // how often to log status to stdout
errTimeout = 10 * time.Second // back-off timeout on error
)
var urls = []string{
"http://www.google.com/",
"http://golang.org/",
"http://blog.golang.org/",
}
// State represents the last-known state of a URL.
type State struct {
url string
status string
}
// StateMonitor maintains a map that stores the state of the URLs being
// polled, and prints the current state every updateInterval nanoseconds.
// It returns a chan State to which resource state should be sent.
func StateMonitor(updateInterval time.Duration) chan<- State {
updates := make(chan State)
urlStatus := make(map[string]string)
ticker := time.NewTicker(updateInterval)
go func() {
for {
select {
case <-ticker.C:
logState(urlStatus)
case s := <-updates:
urlStatus[s.url] = s.status
}
}
}()
return updates
}
// logState prints a state map.
func logState(s map[string]string) {
log.Println("Current state:")
for k, v := range s {
log.Printf(" %s %s", k, v)
}
}
// Resource represents an HTTP URL to be polled by this program.
type Resource struct {
url string
errCount int
}
// Poll executes an HTTP HEAD request for url
// and returns the HTTP status string or an error string.
func (r *Resource) Poll() string {
resp, err := http.Head(r.url)
if err != nil {
log.Println("Error", r.url, err)
r.errCount++
return err.Error()
}
r.errCount = 0
return resp.Status
}
// Sleep sleeps for an appropriate interval (dependent on error state)
// before sending the Resource to done.
func (r *Resource) Sleep(done chan<- *Resource) {
time.Sleep(pollInterval + errTimeout*time.Duration(r.errCount))
done <- r
}
func Poller(in <-chan *Resource, out chan<- *Resource, status chan<- State) {
for r := range in {
s := r.Poll()
status <- State{r.url, s}
out <- r
}
}
func main() {
// Create our input and output channels.
pending, complete := make(chan *Resource), make(chan *Resource)
// Launch the StateMonitor.
status := StateMonitor(statusInterval)
// Launch some Poller goroutines.
for i := 0; i < numPollers; i++ {
go Poller(pending, complete, status)
}
// Send some Resources to the pending queue.
go func() {
for _, url := range urls {
pending <- &Resource{url: url}
}
}()
for r := range complete {
go r.Sleep(pending)
}
}

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<!--{
"Title": "Go Community Code of Conduct",
"Path": "/conduct",
"Template": true
}-->
<style>
ul {
max-width: 800px;
}
ul ul {
margin: 0 0 5px;
}
</style>
<h2 id="about">About the Code of Conduct</h2>
<h3 id="why">Why have a Code of Conduct?</h3>
<p>
Online communities include people from many different backgrounds.
The Go contributors are committed to providing a friendly, safe and welcoming
environment for all, regardless of age, disability, gender, nationality,
ethnicity, religion, sexuality, or similar personal characteristic.
</p>
<p>
The first goal of the Code of Conduct is to specify a baseline standard
of behavior so that people with different social values and communication
styles can talk about Go effectively, productively, and respectfully.
</p>
<p>
The second goal is to provide a mechanism for resolving conflicts in the
community when they arise.
</p>
<p>
The third goal of the Code of Conduct is to make our community welcoming to
people from different backgrounds.
Diversity is critical to the project; for Go to be successful, it needs
contributors and users from all backgrounds.
(See <a href="https://blog.golang.org/open-source">Go, Open Source, Community</a>.)
</p>
<p>
With that said, a healthy community must allow for disagreement and debate.
The Code of Conduct is not a mechanism for people to silence others with whom
they disagree.
</p>
<h3 id="spaces">Where does the Code of Conduct apply?</h3>
<p>
If you participate in or contribute to the Go ecosystem in any way,
you are encouraged to follow the Code of Conduct while doing so.
</p>
<p>
Explicit enforcement of the Code of Conduct applies to the
official forums operated by the Go project (“Go spaces”):
</p>
<ul>
<li>The official <a href="https://github.com/golang/">GitHub projects</a>
and <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/">code reviews</a>.
<li>The <a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-nuts">golang-nuts</a> and
<a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-dev">golang-dev</a> mailing lists.
<li>The #go-nuts IRC channel on Freenode.
</ul>
<p>
Other Go groups (such as conferences, meetups, and other unofficial forums) are
encouraged to adopt this Code of Conduct. Those groups must provide their own
moderators and/or working group (see below).
</p>
<h2 id="values">Gopher values</h2>
<p>
These are the values to which people in the Go community (“Gophers”) should aspire.
</p>
<ul>
<li>Be friendly and welcoming
<li>Be patient
<ul>
<li>Remember that people have varying communication styles and that not
everyone is using their native language.
(Meaning and tone can be lost in translation.)
</ul>
<li>Be thoughtful
<ul>
<li>Productive communication requires effort.
Think about how your words will be interpreted.
<li>Remember that sometimes it is best to refrain entirely from commenting.
</ul>
<li>Be respectful
<ul>
<li>In particular, respect differences of opinion.
</ul>
<li>Be charitable
<ul>
<li>Interpret the arguments of others in good faith, do not seek to disagree.
<li>When we do disagree, try to understand why.
</ul>
<li>Avoid destructive behavior:
<ul>
<li>Derailing: stay on topic; if you want to talk about something else,
start a new conversation.
<li>Unconstructive criticism: don't merely decry the current state of affairs;
offer—or at least solicit—suggestions as to how things may be improved.
<li>Snarking (pithy, unproductive, sniping comments)
<li>Discussing potentially offensive or sensitive issues;
this all too often leads to unnecessary conflict.
<li>Microaggressions: brief and commonplace verbal, behavioral and
environmental indignities that communicate hostile, derogatory or negative
slights and insults to a person or group.
</ul>
</ul>
<p>
People are complicated.
You should expect to be misunderstood and to misunderstand others;
when this inevitably occurs, resist the urge to be defensive or assign blame.
Try not to take offense where no offense was intended.
Give people the benefit of the doubt.
Even if the intent was to provoke, do not rise to it.
It is the responsibility of <i>all parties</i> to de-escalate conflict when it arises.
</p>
<h2 id="unwelcome_behavior">Unwelcome behavior</h2>
<p>
These actions are explicitly forbidden in Go spaces:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Insulting, demeaning, hateful, or threatening remarks.
<li>Discrimination based on age, disability, gender, nationality, race,
religion, sexuality, or similar personal characteristic.
<li>Bullying or systematic harassment.
<li>Unwelcome sexual advances.
<li>Incitement to any of these.
</ul>
<h2 id="moderation">Moderation</h2>
<p>
The Go spaces are not free speech venues; they are for discussion about Go.
Each of these spaces have their own moderators.
</p>
<p>
When using the official Go spaces you should act in the spirit of the “Gopher
values”.
If a reported conflict cannot be resolved amicably, the CoC Working Group
may make a recommendation to the relevant forum moderators.
</p>
<p>
CoC Working Group members and forum moderators are held to a higher standard than other community members.
If a working group member or moderator creates an inappropriate situation, they
should expect less leeway than others, and should expect to be removed from
their position if they cannot adhere to the CoC.
</p>
<p>
Complaints about working group member or moderator actions must be handled
using the reporting process below.
</p>
<h2 id="reporting">Reporting issues</h2>
<p>
The Code of Conduct Working Group is a group of people that represent the Go
community. They are responsible for handling conduct-related issues.
Their purpose is to de-escalate conflicts and try to resolve issues to the
satisfaction of all parties. They are:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Aditya Mukerjee &lt;dev@chimeracoder.net&gt;
<li>Andrew Gerrand &lt;adg@golang.org&gt;
<li>Peggy Li &lt;peggyli.224@gmail.com&gt;
<li>Sarah Adams &lt;sadams.codes@gmail.com&gt;
<li>Steve Francia &lt;steve.francia@gmail.com&gt;
<li>Verónica López &lt;gveronicalg@gmail.com&gt;
</ul>
<p>
If you encounter a conduct-related issue, you should report it to the
Working Group using the process described below.
<b>Do not</b> post about the issue publicly or try to rally sentiment against a
particular individual or group.
</p>
<ul>
<li>Mail <a href="mailto:conduct@golang.org">conduct@golang.org</a>.
<ul>
<li>Your message will reach the Working Group.
<li>Reports are confidential within the Working Group.
<li>You may contact a member of the group directly if you do not feel
comfortable contacting the group as a whole. That member will then raise
the issue with the Working Group as a whole, preserving the privacy of the
reporter (if desired).
<li>If your report concerns a member of the Working Group they will be recused
from Working Group discussions of the report.
<li>The Working Group will strive to handle reports with discretion and
sensitivity, to protect the privacy of the involved parties,
and to avoid conflicts of interest.
</ul>
<li>You should receive a response within 48 hours (likely sooner).
(Should you choose to contact a single Working Group member,
it may take longer to receive a response.)
<li>The Working Group will meet to review the incident and determine what happened.
<ul>
<li>With the permission of person reporting the incident, the Working Group
may reach out to other community members for more context.
</ul>
<li>The Working Group will reach a decision as to how to act. These may include:
<ul>
<li>Nothing.
<li>Passing the report along to the offender.
<li>A recommendation of action to the relevant forum moderators.
</ul>
<li>The Working Group will reach out to the original reporter to let them know
the decision.
<li>Appeals to the decision may be made to the Working Group,
or to any of its members directly.
</ul>
<p>
<b>Note that the goal of the Code of Conduct and the Working Group is to resolve
conflicts in the most harmonious way possible.</b>
We hope that in most cases issues may be resolved through polite discussion and
mutual agreement.
</p>
<p>
Changes to the Code of Conduct (including to the members of the Working Group)
should be proposed using the
<a href="https://golang.org/s/proposal-process">change proposal process</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="summary">Summary</h2>
<ul>
<li>Treat everyone with respect and kindness.
<li>Be thoughtful in how you communicate.
<li>Dont be destructive or inflammatory.
<li>If you encounter an issue, please mail <a href="mailto:conduct@golang.org">conduct@golang.org</a>.
</ul>
<h3 id="acknowledgements">Acknowledgements</h3>
<p>
Parts of this document were derived from the Code of Conduct documents of the
Django, FreeBSD, and Rust projects.
</p>

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<!--{
"Title": "The Go Project",
"Path": "/project/"
}-->
<img class="gopher" src="/doc/gopher/project.png" />
<div id="manual-nav"></div>
<p>
Go is an open source project developed by a team at
<a href="//google.com/">Google</a> and many
<a href="/CONTRIBUTORS">contributors</a> from the open source community.
</p>
<p>
Go is distributed under a <a href="/LICENSE">BSD-style license</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="announce"><a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-announce">Announcements Mailing List</a></h3>
<p>
A low traffic mailing list for important announcements, such as new releases.
</p>
<p>
We encourage all Go users to subscribe to
<a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-announce">golang-announce</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="go1">Version history</h2>
<h3 id="release"><a href="/doc/devel/release.html">Release History</a></h3>
<p>A <a href="/doc/devel/release.html">summary</a> of the changes between Go releases. Notes for the major releases:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.9">Go 1.9</a> <small>(August 2017)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.8">Go 1.8</a> <small>(February 2017)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.7">Go 1.7</a> <small>(August 2016)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.6">Go 1.6</a> <small>(February 2016)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.5">Go 1.5</a> <small>(August 2015)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.4">Go 1.4</a> <small>(December 2014)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.3">Go 1.3</a> <small>(June 2014)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.2">Go 1.2</a> <small>(December 2013)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1.1">Go 1.1</a> <small>(May 2013)</small></li>
<li><a href="/doc/go1">Go 1</a> <small>(March 2012)</small></li>
</ul>
<h3 id="go1compat"><a href="/doc/go1compat">Go 1 and the Future of Go Programs</a></h3>
<p>
What Go 1 defines and the backwards-compatibility guarantees one can expect as
Go 1 matures.
</p>
<h2 id="resources">Developer Resources</h2>
<h3 id="source"><a href="https://golang.org/change">Source Code</a></h3>
<p>Check out the Go source code.</p>
<h3 id="golang-dev"><a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-dev">Developer</a> and
<a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-codereviews">Code Review Mailing List</a></h3>
<p>The <a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-dev">golang-dev</a>
mailing list is for discussing code changes to the Go project.
The <a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-codereviews">golang-codereviews</a>
mailing list is for actual reviewing of the code changes (CLs).</p>
<p>For general discussion of Go programming, see <a
href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-nuts">golang-nuts</a>.</p>
<h3 id="golang-checkins"><a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-checkins">Checkins Mailing List</a></h3>
<p>A mailing list that receives a message summarizing each checkin to the Go repository.</p>
<h3 id="build_status"><a href="//build.golang.org/">Build Status</a></h3>
<p>View the status of Go builds across the supported operating
systems and architectures.</p>
<h2 id="howto">How you can help</h2>
<h3><a href="//golang.org/issue">Reporting issues</a></h3>
<p>
If you spot bugs, mistakes, or inconsistencies in the Go project's code or
documentation, please let us know by
<a href="//golang.org/issue/new">filing a ticket</a>
on our <a href="//golang.org/issue">issue tracker</a>.
(Of course, you should check it's not an existing issue before creating
a new one.)
</p>
<p>
We pride ourselves on being meticulous; no issue is too small.
</p>
<p>
Security-related issues should be reported to
<a href="mailto:security@golang.org">security@golang.org</a>.<br>
See the <a href="/security">security policy</a> for more details.
</p>
<p>
Community-related issues should be reported to
<a href="mailto:conduct@golang.org">conduct@golang.org</a>.<br>
See the <a href="/conduct">Code of Conduct</a> for more details.
</p>
<h3><a href="/doc/contribute.html">Contributing code</a></h3>
<p>
Go is an open source project and we welcome contributions from the community.
</p>
<p>
To get started, read these <a href="/doc/contribute.html">contribution
guidelines</a> for information on design, testing, and our code review process.
</p>
<p>
Check <a href="//golang.org/issue">the tracker</a> for
open issues that interest you. Those labeled
<a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22help+wanted%22">help wanted</a>
are particularly in need of outside help.
</p>

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<!--{
"Title": "Contribution Guide"
}-->
<p>
The Go project welcomes all contributors. The process of contributing
to the Go project may be different than many projects you are used to.
This document is intended as a guide to help you through the contribution
process. This guide assumes you have a basic understanding of Git and Go.
</p>
<p>
(Note that the <code>gccgo</code> frontend lives elsewhere;
see <a href="gccgo_contribute.html">Contributing to gccgo</a>.)
</p>
<p>
Sensitive security-related issues should be reported to <a href="mailto:security@golang.org">security@golang.org</a>.
</p>
<h1 id="contributor">Becoming a contributor</h1>
<p>
Before you can contribute to the Go project you need to setup a few prerequisites.
The Go project uses <a href="https://www.gerritcodereview.com/">Gerrit</a>, an open
source online tool, to perform all code reviews.
Gerrit uses your email address as a unique identifier.
The Go project contributing flow is currently configured to work only with Google Accounts.
You must go through the following process <em>prior to contributing</em>.
You only need to do this once per Google Account.
</p>
<h2 id="go-contrib-init">Automatically set up &amp; diagnose your development environment</h3>
<p>
The <code>go-contrib-init</code> tool configures and debugs your Go
development environment, automatically performing many of the steps
on this page, or telling you what you need to do next. If you wish
to use it, run:
</p>
<pre>
$ go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/go-contrib-init
$ cd /code/to/edit
$ go-contrib-init
</pre>
<p>
The tool will either set things up, tell you that everything is
configured, or tell you what steps you need to do manually.
</p>
<h2 id="auth">Configure Git to use Gerrit</h2>
<p>
You'll need a web browser and a command line terminal.
You should already have Git installed.
</p>
<p>
Gerrit uses Google Accounts for authentication.
If you don't have a Google Account, you can create an account which
<a href="https://www.google.com/accounts/NewAccount">includes
a new Gmail email account</a> or create an account associated
<a href="https://accounts.google.com/SignUpWithoutGmail">with your existing
email address</a>.
</p>
<h3>Step 1: Sign in to googlesource and generate a password</h3>
<p>
Visit <a href="https://go.googlesource.com">go.googlesource.com</a>
and click on "Generate Password" in the page's top right menu bar.
You will be redirected to accounts.google.com to sign in.
</p>
<h3>Step 2: Run the provided script</h3>
<p>
After signing in, you are taken to a page on go.googlesource.com with the title "Configure Git".
This page contains a personalized script which when run locally will configure git
to have your unique authentication key.
This key is paired with one generated server side similar to how ssh keys work.
</p>
<p>
Copy and run this script locally in your command line terminal.
(On a Windows computer using cmd you should instead follow the instructions
in the yellow box to run the command. If you are using git-bash use the same
script as *nix.)
</p>
<p>
Your secret authentication token is now in a <code>.gitcookie</code> file
and Git is configured to use this file.
</p>
<h3 id="gerrit">Step 3: Register with Gerrit</h3>
<p>
Now that you have your authentication token, you need to register your
account with Gerrit.
To do this, visit <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/login/">
go-review.googlesource.com/login/</a>.
Sign in using the same Google Account you used above.
</p>
<h2 id="cla">Contributor License Agreement</h2>
<h3 id="which_cla">Which CLA</h3>
<p>
Before sending your first change to the Go project
you must have completed one of the following two CLAs.
Which CLA you should sign depends on who owns the copyright to your work.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
If you are the copyright holder, you will need to agree to the
<a href="https://developers.google.com/open-source/cla/individual">individual
contributor license agreement</a>, which can be completed online.
</li>
<li>
If your organization is the copyright holder, the organization
will need to agree to the
<a href="https://developers.google.com/open-source/cla/corporate">corporate
contributor license agreement</a>.<br>
</li>
</ul>
<p>
<i>If the copyright holder for your contribution has already completed the
agreement in connection with another Google open source project,
it does not need to be completed again.</i>
</p>
<h3 id="signing_cla">Completing the CLA</h3>
<p>
You can see your currently signed agreements and sign new ones through the Gerrit
interface.
To do this, <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/login/">Log into Gerrit</a>,
then visit the <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/settings/agreements">Agreements</a>
page.
If you do not have a signed agreement listed there, you can create one
by clicking "New Contributor Agreement" and following the steps.
</p>
<p>
If the copyright holder for the code you are submitting changes &mdash; for example,
if you start contributing code on behalf of a new company &mdash; please send email
to golang-dev and let us know, so that we can make sure an appropriate agreement is
completed and update the <code>AUTHORS</code> file.
</p>
<span id="Code_review"></span>
<h1 id="prepare_dev_env">Preparing a Development Environment for Contributing</h1>
<h2 id="git-codereview">Setting up Git for submission to Gerrit</h2>
<p>
Changes to Go must be reviewed before they are accepted, no matter who makes the change.
A custom git command called <code>git-codereview</code>, discussed below,
helps manage the code review process through a Google-hosted
<a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/">instance</a> Gerrit.
</p>
<h3 id="git-codereview_install">Install the git-codereview command</h3>
<p>
Install the <code>git-codereview</code> command by running,
</p>
<pre>
$ go get -u golang.org/x/review/git-codereview
</pre>
<p>
Make sure <code>git-codereview</code> is installed in your shell path, so that the
<code>git</code> command can find it. Check that
</p>
<pre>
$ git codereview help
</pre>
<p>
prints help text, not an error.
</p>
<p>
On Windows, when using git-bash you must make sure that
<code>git-codereview.exe</code> is in your git exec-path.
Run <code>git --exec-path</code> to discover the right location then create a
symbolic link or simply copy the executible from $GOPATH/bin to this directory.
</p>
<p>
<b>Note to Git aficionados:</b>
The <code>git-codereview</code> command is not required to
upload and manage Gerrit code reviews.
For those who prefer plain Git, the text below gives the Git equivalent of
each git-codereview command.
</p>
<p>
If you do use plain Git, note that you still need the commit hooks that the
git-codereview command configures; those hooks add a Gerrit
<code>Change-Id</code> line to the commit message and check that all Go source
files have been formatted with gofmt.
Even if you intend to use plain Git for
daily work, install the hooks in a new Git checkout by running
<code>git-codereview</code> <code>hooks</code>.
</p>
<p>
The workflow described below assumes a single change per branch.
It is also possible to prepare a sequence of (usually related) changes in a single branch.
See the <a href="https://golang.org/x/review/git-codereview">git-codereview documentation</a> for details.
</p>
<h3 id="git-config">Set up git aliases</h3>
<p>
The <code>git-codereview</code> command can be run directly from the shell
by typing, for instance,
</p>
<pre>
$ git codereview sync
</pre>
<p>
but it is more convenient to set up aliases for <code>git-codereview</code>'s own
subcommands, so that the above becomes,
</p>
<pre>
$ git sync
</pre>
<p>
The <code>git-codereview</code> subcommands have been chosen to be distinct from
Git's own, so it's safe to do so.
</p>
<p>
The aliases are optional, but in the rest of this document we will assume
they are installed.
To install them, copy this text into your Git configuration file
(usually <code>.gitconfig</code> in your home directory):
</p>
<pre>
[alias]
change = codereview change
gofmt = codereview gofmt
mail = codereview mail
pending = codereview pending
submit = codereview submit
sync = codereview sync
</pre>
<span id="help"></span>
<h3 id="understanding_git-codereview">Understanding the git-codereview command</h3>
<p>After installing the <code>git-codereview</code> command, you can run</p>
<pre>
$ git codereview help
</pre>
<p>
to learn more about its commands.
You can also read the <a href="https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/review/git-codereview">command documentation</a>.
</p>
<h1 id="making_a_contribution">Making a Contribution</h1>
<h2 id="Design">Discuss your design</h2>
<p>
The project welcomes submissions but please let everyone know what
you're working on if you want to change or add to the Go repositories.
</p>
<p>
Before undertaking to write something new for the Go project,
please <a href="https://golang.org/issue/new">file an issue</a>
(or claim an <a href="https://golang.org/issues">existing issue</a>).
Significant changes must go through the
<a href="https://golang.org/s/proposal-process">change proposal process</a>
before they can be accepted.
</p>
<p>
This process gives everyone a chance to validate the design,
helps prevent duplication of effort,
and ensures that the idea fits inside the goals for the language and tools.
It also checks that the design is sound before code is written;
the code review tool is not the place for high-level discussions.
</p>
<p>
When planning work, please note that the Go project follows a <a
href="https://golang.org/wiki/Go-Release-Cycle">six-month development cycle</a>.
The latter half of each cycle is a three-month feature freeze during
which only bug fixes and doc updates are accepted. New contributions can be
sent during a feature freeze but will not be accepted until the freeze thaws.
</p>
<h2 id="making_a_change">Making a change</h2>
<h3 id="checkout_go">Getting Go Source</h3>
<p>
First you need to have a local copy of the source checked out from the correct
repository.
As Go builds Go you will also likely need to have a working version
of Go installed (some documentation changes may not need this).
This should be a recent version of Go and can be obtained via any package or
binary distribution or you can build it from source.
</p>
<p>
You should checkout the Go source repo anywhere you want as long as it's
outside of your $GOPATH.
Go to a directory where you want the source to appear and run the following
command in a terminal.
</p>
<pre>
$ git clone https://go.googlesource.com/go
$ cd go
</pre>
<h3 id="master">Contributing to the main Go tree</h3>
<p>
Most Go installations use a release branch, but new changes should
only be made based on the master branch. <br>
(They may be applied later to a release branch as part of the release process,
but most contributors won't do this themselves.)
Before making a change, make sure you start on the master branch:
</p>
<pre>
$ git checkout master
$ git sync
</pre>
<p>
(In Git terms, <code>git</code> <code>sync</code> runs
<code>git</code> <code>pull</code> <code>-r</code>.)
</p>
<h3 id="subrepos">Contributing to subrepositories (golang.org/x/...)</h3>
<p>
If you are contributing a change to a subrepository, obtain the
Go package using <code>go get</code>. For example, to contribute
to <code>golang.org/x/oauth2</code>, check out the code by running:
</p>
<pre>
$ go get -d golang.org/x/oauth2/...
</pre>
<p>
Then, change your directory to the package's source directory
(<code>$GOPATH/src/golang.org/x/oauth2</code>).
</p>
<h3 id="change">Make your changes</h3>
<p>
The entire checked-out tree is editable.
Make your changes as you see fit ensuring that you create appropriate
tests along with your changes. Test your changes as you go.
</p>
<h3 id="copyright">Copyright</h3>
<p>
Files in the Go repository don't list author names, both to avoid clutter
and to avoid having to keep the lists up to date.
Instead, your name will appear in the
<a href="https://golang.org/change">change log</a> and in the <a
href="/CONTRIBUTORS"><code>CONTRIBUTORS</code></a> file and perhaps the <a
href="/AUTHORS"><code>AUTHORS</code></a> file.
These files are automatically generated from the commit logs perodically.
The <a href="/AUTHORS"><code>AUTHORS</code></a> file defines who &ldquo;The Go
Authors&rdquo;&mdash;the copyright holders&mdash;are.
</p>
<p>New files that you contribute should use the standard copyright header:</p>
<pre>
// Copyright 2017 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.
</pre>
<p>
Files in the repository are copyright the year they are added.
Do not update the copyright year on files that you change.
</p>
<h3 id="commit_changes">Commit your changes</h3>
<p>
Once you have edited files, you must tell Git that they have been modified.
You must also tell Git about any files that are added, removed, or renamed files.
These operations are done with the usual Git commands,
<code>git</code> <code>add</code>,
<code>git</code> <code>rm</code>,
and
<code>git</code> <code>mv</code>.
</p>
<p>
Once you have the changes queued up, you will want to commit them.
In the Go contribution workflow this is done with a <code>git</code>
<code>change</code> command, which creates a local branch and commits the changes
directly to that local branch.
</p>
<pre>
$ git change <i>&lt;branch&gt;</i>
</pre>
<p>
The name <i>&lt;branch&gt;</i> is an arbitrary one you choose to identify the
local branch containing your changes and will not be used elsewhere.
This is an offline operation and nothing will be sent to the server yet.
</p>
<p>
(In Git terms, <code>git</code> <code>change</code> <code>&lt;branch&gt;</code>
runs <code>git</code> <code>checkout</code> <code>-b</code> <code>branch</code>,
then <code>git</code> <code>branch</code> <code>--set-upstream-to</code> <code>origin/master</code>,
then <code>git</code> <code>commit</code>.)
</p>
<p>
As the <code>git</code> <code>commit</code> is the final step, Git will open an
editor to ask for a commit message. (It uses the editor named by
the <code>$EDITOR</code> environment variable,
<code>vi</code> by default.)
The file will look like:
</p>
<pre>
# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
# with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts the commit.
# On branch foo
# Changes not staged for commit:
# modified: editedfile.go
#
</pre>
<p>
At the beginning of this file is a blank line; replace it
with a thorough description of your change.
The first line of the change description is conventionally a one-line
summary of the change, prefixed by the primary affected package,
and is used as the subject for code review email.
It should complete the sentence "This change modifies Go to _____."
The rest of the description elaborates and should provide context for the
change and explain what it does.
Write in complete sentences with correct punctuation, just like
for your comments in Go.
If there is a helpful reference, mention it here.
If you've fixed an issue, reference it by number with a # before it.
</p>
<p>
After editing, the template might now read:
</p>
<pre>
math: improve Sin, Cos and Tan precision for very large arguments
The existing implementation has poor numerical properties for
large arguments, so use the McGillicutty algorithm to improve
accuracy above 1e10.
The algorithm is described at http://wikipedia.org/wiki/McGillicutty_Algorithm
Fixes #159
# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
# with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts the commit.
# On branch foo
# Changes not staged for commit:
# modified: editedfile.go
#
</pre>
<p>
The commented section of the file lists all the modified files in your client.
It is best to keep unrelated changes in different commits,
so if you see a file listed that should not be included, abort
the command and move that file to a different branch.
</p>
<p>
The special notation "Fixes #159" associates the change with issue 159 in the
<a href="https://golang.org/issue/159">Go issue tracker</a>.
When this change is eventually applied, the issue
tracker will automatically mark the issue as fixed.
(There are several such conventions, described in detail in the
<a href="https://help.github.com/articles/closing-issues-via-commit-messages/">GitHub Issue Tracker documentation</a>.)
</p>
<p>
Once you have finished writing the commit message,
save the file and exit the editor.
</p>
<p>
You must have the $EDITOR environment variable set properly and working properly (exiting cleanly)
for this operation to succeed.
If you run into any issues at this step, it's likely your editor isn't exiting cleanly.
Try setting a different editor in your $EDITOR environment variable.
</p>
<p>
If you wish to do more editing, re-stage your changes using
<code>git</code> <code>add</code>, and then run
</p>
<pre>
$ git change
</pre>
<p>
to update the change description and incorporate the staged changes.
The change description contains a <code>Change-Id</code> line near the bottom,
added by a Git commit hook during the initial
<code>git</code> <code>change</code>.
That line is used by Gerrit to match successive uploads of the same change.
Do not edit or delete it.
</p>
<p>
(In Git terms, <code>git</code> <code>change</code> with no branch name
runs <code>git</code> <code>commit</code> <code>--amend</code>.)
</p>
<h3 id="Testing">Testing</h3>
<p>
You've <a href="code.html">written and tested your code</a>, but
before sending code out for review, run all the tests for the whole
tree to make sure the changes don't break other packages or programs:
</p>
<pre>
$ cd go/src
$ ./all.bash
</pre>
<p>
(To build under Windows use <code>all.bat</code>.)
</p>
<p>
After running for a while, the command should print
</p>
<pre>
"ALL TESTS PASSED".
</pre>
<h3 id="mail">Send the change for review</h3>
<p>
Once the change is ready, send it for review.
This is similar to a <code>git push</code> in a GitHub style workflow.
This is done via the mail alias setup earlier which despite its name, doesn't
directly mail anything, it simply sends the change to Gerrit via git push.
</p>
<pre>
$ git mail
</pre>
<p>
(In Git terms, <code>git</code> <code>mail</code> pushes the local committed
changes to Gerrit using <code>git</code> <code>push</code> <code>origin</code>
<code>HEAD:refs/for/master</code>.)
</p>
<p>
If your change relates to an open issue, please add a comment to the issue
announcing your proposed fix, including a link to your change.
</p>
<p>
The code review server assigns your change an issue number and URL,
which <code>git</code> <code>mail</code> will print, something like:
</p>
<pre>
remote: New Changes:
remote: https://go-review.googlesource.com/99999 math: improved Sin, Cos and Tan precision for very large arguments
</pre>
<h3>Troubleshooting</h3>
<p>
The most common way that the <code>git mail</code> command fails is because the
email address used has not gone through the setup above.
<br>
If you see something like...
</p>
<pre>
remote: Processing changes: refs: 1, done
remote:
remote: ERROR: In commit ab13517fa29487dcf8b0d48916c51639426c5ee9
remote: ERROR: author email address XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
remote: ERROR: does not match your user account.
</pre>
<p>
You need to either add the email address listed to the CLA or set this repo to use
another email address already approved.
</p>
<p>
First let's change the email address for this repo so this doesn't happen again.
You can change your email address for this repo with the following command:
</p>
<pre>
$ git config user.email email@address.com
</pre>
<p>
Then change the previous commit to use this alternative email address.
You can do that with:
</p>
<pre>
$ git commit --amend --author="Author Name &lt;email@address.com&gt;"
</pre>
<p>
Finally try to resend with:
</p>
<pre>
$ git mail
</pre>
<h3 id="cc">Specifying a reviewer / CCing others</h3>
<p>
Unless explicitly told otherwise, such as in the discussion leading
up to sending in the change, it's better not to specify a reviewer.
All changes are automatically CC'ed to the
<a href="https://groups.google.com/group/golang-codereviews">golang-codereviews@googlegroups.com</a>
mailing list. If this is your first ever change, there may be a moderation
delay before it appears on the mailing list, to prevent spam.
</p>
<p>
You can specify a reviewer or CC interested parties
using the <code>-r</code> or <code>-cc</code> options.
Both accept a comma-separated list of email addresses:
</p>
<pre>
$ git mail -r joe@golang.org -cc mabel@example.com,math-nuts@swtch.com
</pre>
<h2 id="review">Going through the review process</h2>
<p>
Running <code>git</code> <code>mail</code> will send an email to you and the
reviewers asking them to visit the issue's URL and make comments on the change.
When done, the reviewer adds comments through the Gerrit user interface
and clicks "Reply" to send comments back.
You will receive a mail notification when this happens.
You must reply through the web interface.
(Unlike with the old Rietveld review system, replying by mail has no effect.)
</p>
<h3 id="revise">Revise and resend</h3>
<p>
The Go contribution workflow is optimized for iterative revisions based on
feedback.
It is rare that an initial contribution will be ready to be applied as is.
As you revise your contribution and resend Gerrit will retain a history of
all the changes and comments made in the single URL.
</p>
<p>
You must respond to review comments through the web interface.
(Unlike with the old Rietveld review system, responding by mail has no effect.)
</p>
<p>
When you have revised the code and are ready for another round of review,
stage those changes and use <code>git</code> <code>change</code> to update the
commit.
To send the updated change for another round of review,
run <code>git</code> <code>mail</code> again.
</p>
<p>
The reviewer can comment on the new copy, and the process repeats.
The reviewer approves the change by giving it a positive score
(+1 or +2) and replying <code>LGTM</code>: looks good to me.
</p>
<p>
You can see a list of your pending changes by running <code>git</code>
<code>pending</code>, and switch between change branches with <code>git</code>
<code>change</code> <code><i>&lt;branch&gt;</i></code>.
</p>
<h3 id="sync">Synchronize your client</h3>
<p>
While you were working, others might have submitted changes to the repository.
To update your local branch, run
</p>
<pre>
$ git sync
</pre>
<p>
(In git terms, <code>git</code> <code>sync</code> runs
<code>git</code> <code>pull</code> <code>-r</code>.)
</p>
<h3 id="resolving_conflicts">Resolving Conflicts</h3>
<p>
If files you were editing have changed, Git does its best to merge the
remote changes into your local changes.
It may leave some files to merge by hand.
</p>
<p>
For example, suppose you have edited <code>sin.go</code> but
someone else has committed an independent change.
When you run <code>git</code> <code>sync</code>,
you will get the (scary-looking) output:
<pre>
$ git sync
Failed to merge in the changes.
Patch failed at 0023 math: improved Sin, Cos and Tan precision for very large arguments
The copy of the patch that failed is found in:
/home/you/repo/.git/rebase-apply/patch
When you have resolved this problem, run "git rebase --continue".
If you prefer to skip this patch, run "git rebase --skip" instead.
To check out the original branch and stop rebasing, run "git rebase --abort".
</pre>
<p>
If this happens, run
</p>
<pre>
$ git status
</pre>
<p>
to see which files failed to merge.
The output will look something like this:
</p>
<pre>
rebase in progress; onto a24c3eb
You are currently rebasing branch 'mcgillicutty' on 'a24c3eb'.
(fix conflicts and then run "git rebase --continue")
(use "git rebase --skip" to skip this patch)
(use "git rebase --abort" to check out the original branch)
Unmerged paths:
(use "git reset HEAD &lt;file&gt;..." to unstage)
(use "git add &lt;file&gt;..." to mark resolution)
<i>both modified: sin.go</i>
</pre>
<p>
The only important part in that transcript is the italicized "both modified"
line: Git failed to merge your changes with the conflicting change.
When this happens, Git leaves both sets of edits in the file,
with conflicts marked by <code>&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;</code> and
<code>&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;</code>.
It is now your job to edit the file to combine them.
Continuing the example, searching for those strings in <code>sin.go</code>
might turn up:
</p>
<pre>
arg = scale(arg)
&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt; HEAD
if arg &lt; 1e9 {
=======
if arg &lt; 1e10 {
&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; mcgillicutty
largeReduce(arg)
</pre>
<p>
Git doesn't show it, but suppose the original text that both edits
started with was 1e8; you changed it to 1e10 and the other change to 1e9,
so the correct answer might now be 1e10.
First, edit the section to remove the markers and leave the correct code:
</p>
<pre>
arg = scale(arg)
if arg &lt; 1e10 {
largeReduce(arg)
</pre>
<p>
Then tell Git that the conflict is resolved by running
</p>
<pre>
$ git add sin.go
</pre>
<p>
If you had been editing the file, say for debugging, but do not
care to preserve your changes, you can run
<code>git</code> <code>reset</code> <code>HEAD</code> <code>sin.go</code>
to abandon your changes.
Then run <code>git</code> <code>rebase</code> <code>--continue</code> to
restore the change commit.
</p>
<h3 id="download">Reviewing code by others</h3>
<p>
As part of the review process reviewers can propose changes directly (in the
GitHub workflow this would be someone else attaching commits to a pull request).
You can import these changes proposed by someone else into your local Git repository.
On the Gerrit review page, click the "Download ▼" link in the upper right
corner, copy the "Checkout" command and run it from your local Git repo. It
should look something like this:
</p>
<pre>
$ git fetch https://go.googlesource.com/review refs/changes/21/1221/1 &amp;&amp; git checkout FETCH_HEAD
</pre>
<p>
To revert, change back to the branch you were working in.
</p>
<h2 id="submit">Apply the change to the master branch</h2>
<p>
After the code has been <code>LGTM</code>'ed, an approver may
apply it to the master branch using the Gerrit UI.
There is a "Submit" button on the web page for the change
that appears once the change is approved (marked +2).
</p>
<p>
This checks the change into the repository.
The change description will include a link to the code review,
and the code review will be updated with a link to the change
in the repository.
Since the method used to integrate the changes is "Cherry Pick",
the commit hashes in the repository will be changed by
the "Submit" operation.
</p>
<h2 id="more">More information</h2>
<p>
In addition to the information here, the Go community maintains a <a
href="https://golang.org/wiki/CodeReview">CodeReview</a> wiki page.
Feel free to contribute to this page as you learn the review process.
</p>

518
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@@ -0,0 +1,518 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Debugging Go Code with GDB",
"Path": "/doc/gdb"
}-->
<p><i>
This applies to the standard toolchain (the <code>gc</code> Go
compiler and tools). Gccgo has native gdb support.
Besides this overview you might want to consult the
<a href="http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/">GDB manual</a>.
</i></p>
<p>
GDB does not understand Go programs well.
The stack management, threading, and runtime contain aspects that differ
enough from the execution model GDB expects that they can confuse
the debugger, even when the program is compiled with gccgo.
As a consequence, although GDB can be useful in some situations, it is
not a reliable debugger for Go programs, particularly heavily concurrent ones.
Moreover, it is not a priority for the Go project to address these issues, which
are difficult.
In short, the instructions below should be taken only as a guide to how
to use GDB when it works, not as a guarantee of success.
</p>
<p>
In time, a more Go-centric debugging architecture may be required.
</p>
<h2 id="Introduction">Introduction</h2>
<p>
When you compile and link your Go programs with the <code>gc</code> toolchain
on Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD or NetBSD, the resulting binaries contain DWARFv3
debugging information that recent versions (&gt;7.1) of the GDB debugger can
use to inspect a live process or a core dump.
</p>
<p>
Pass the <code>'-w'</code> flag to the linker to omit the debug information
(for example, <code>go build -ldflags "-w" prog.go</code>).
</p>
<p>
The code generated by the <code>gc</code> compiler includes inlining of
function invocations and registerization of variables. These optimizations
can sometimes make debugging with <code>gdb</code> harder. To disable them
when debugging, pass the flags <code>-gcflags "-N -l"</code> to the
<a href="/cmd/go"><code>go</code></a> command used to build the code being
debugged.
</p>
<p>
If you want to use gdb to inspect a core dump, you can trigger a dump
on a program crash, on systems that permit it, by setting
<code>GOTRACEBACK=crash</code> in the environment (see the
<a href="/pkg/runtime/#hdr-Environment_Variables"> runtime package
documentation</a> for more info).
</p>
<h3 id="Common_Operations">Common Operations</h3>
<ul>
<li>
Show file and line number for code, set breakpoints and disassemble:
<pre>(gdb) <b>list</b>
(gdb) <b>list <i>line</i></b>
(gdb) <b>list <i>file.go</i>:<i>line</i></b>
(gdb) <b>break <i>line</i></b>
(gdb) <b>break <i>file.go</i>:<i>line</i></b>
(gdb) <b>disas</b></pre>
</li>
<li>
Show backtraces and unwind stack frames:
<pre>(gdb) <b>bt</b>
(gdb) <b>frame <i>n</i></b></pre>
</li>
<li>
Show the name, type and location on the stack frame of local variables,
arguments and return values:
<pre>(gdb) <b>info locals</b>
(gdb) <b>info args</b>
(gdb) <b>p variable</b>
(gdb) <b>whatis variable</b></pre>
</li>
<li>
Show the name, type and location of global variables:
<pre>(gdb) <b>info variables <i>regexp</i></b></pre>
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="Go_Extensions">Go Extensions</h3>
<p>
A recent extension mechanism to GDB allows it to load extension scripts for a
given binary. The tool chain uses this to extend GDB with a handful of
commands to inspect internals of the runtime code (such as goroutines) and to
pretty print the built-in map, slice and channel types.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
Pretty printing a string, slice, map, channel or interface:
<pre>(gdb) <b>p <i>var</i></b></pre>
</li>
<li>
A $len() and $cap() function for strings, slices and maps:
<pre>(gdb) <b>p $len(<i>var</i>)</b></pre>
</li>
<li>
A function to cast interfaces to their dynamic types:
<pre>(gdb) <b>p $dtype(<i>var</i>)</b>
(gdb) <b>iface <i>var</i></b></pre>
<p class="detail"><b>Known issue:</b> GDB cant automatically find the dynamic
type of an interface value if its long name differs from its short name
(annoying when printing stacktraces, the pretty printer falls back to printing
the short type name and a pointer).</p>
</li>
<li>
Inspecting goroutines:
<pre>(gdb) <b>info goroutines</b>
(gdb) <b>goroutine <i>n</i> <i>cmd</i></b>
(gdb) <b>help goroutine</b></pre>
For example:
<pre>(gdb) <b>goroutine 12 bt</b></pre>
</li>
</ul>
<p>
If you'd like to see how this works, or want to extend it, take a look at <a
href="/src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py">src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py</a> in
the Go source distribution. It depends on some special magic types
(<code>hash&lt;T,U&gt;</code>) and variables (<code>runtime.m</code> and
<code>runtime.g</code>) that the linker
(<a href="/src/cmd/link/internal/ld/dwarf.go">src/cmd/link/internal/ld/dwarf.go</a>) ensures are described in
the DWARF code.
</p>
<p>
If you're interested in what the debugging information looks like, run
'<code>objdump -W a.out</code>' and browse through the <code>.debug_*</code>
sections.
</p>
<h3 id="Known_Issues">Known Issues</h3>
<ol>
<li>String pretty printing only triggers for type string, not for types derived
from it.</li>
<li>Type information is missing for the C parts of the runtime library.</li>
<li>GDB does not understand Gos name qualifications and treats
<code>"fmt.Print"</code> as an unstructured literal with a <code>"."</code>
that needs to be quoted. It objects even more strongly to method names of
the form <code>pkg.(*MyType).Meth</code>.
<li>All global variables are lumped into package <code>"main"</code>.</li>
</ol>
<h2 id="Tutorial">Tutorial</h2>
<p>
In this tutorial we will inspect the binary of the
<a href="/pkg/regexp/">regexp</a> package's unit tests. To build the binary,
change to <code>$GOROOT/src/regexp</code> and run <code>go test -c</code>.
This should produce an executable file named <code>regexp.test</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="Getting_Started">Getting Started</h3>
<p>
Launch GDB, debugging <code>regexp.test</code>:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>gdb regexp.test</b>
GNU gdb (GDB) 7.2-gg8
Copyright (C) 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv 3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later &lt;http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html&gt;
Type "show copying" and "show warranty" for licensing/warranty details.
This GDB was configured as "x86_64-linux".
Reading symbols from /home/user/go/src/regexp/regexp.test...
done.
Loading Go Runtime support.
(gdb)
</pre>
<p>
The message <code>"Loading Go Runtime support"</code> means that GDB loaded the
extension from <code>$GOROOT/src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py</code>.
</p>
<p>
To help GDB find the Go runtime sources and the accompanying support script,
pass your <code>$GOROOT</code> with the <code>'-d'</code> flag:
</p>
<pre>
$ <b>gdb regexp.test -d $GOROOT</b>
</pre>
<p>
If for some reason GDB still can't find that directory or that script, you can load
it by hand by telling gdb (assuming you have the go sources in
<code>~/go/</code>):
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>source ~/go/src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py</b>
Loading Go Runtime support.
</pre>
<h3 id="Inspecting_the_source">Inspecting the source</h3>
<p>
Use the <code>"l"</code> or <code>"list"</code> command to inspect source code.
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>l</b>
</pre>
<p>
List a specific part of the source parametrizing <code>"list"</code> with a
function name (it must be qualified with its package name).
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>l main.main</b>
</pre>
<p>
List a specific file and line number:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>l regexp.go:1</b>
(gdb) <i># Hit enter to repeat last command. Here, this lists next 10 lines.</i>
</pre>
<h3 id="Naming">Naming</h3>
<p>
Variable and function names must be qualified with the name of the packages
they belong to. The <code>Compile</code> function from the <code>regexp</code>
package is known to GDB as <code>'regexp.Compile'</code>.
</p>
<p>
Methods must be qualified with the name of their receiver types. For example,
the <code>*Regexp</code> types <code>String</code> method is known as
<code>'regexp.(*Regexp).String'</code>.
</p>
<p>
Variables that shadow other variables are magically suffixed with a number in the debug info.
Variables referenced by closures will appear as pointers magically prefixed with '&amp;'.
</p>
<h3 id="Setting_breakpoints">Setting breakpoints</h3>
<p>
Set a breakpoint at the <code>TestFind</code> function:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>b 'regexp.TestFind'</b>
Breakpoint 1 at 0x424908: file /home/user/go/src/regexp/find_test.go, line 148.
</pre>
<p>
Run the program:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>run</b>
Starting program: /home/user/go/src/regexp/regexp.test
Breakpoint 1, regexp.TestFind (t=0xf8404a89c0) at /home/user/go/src/regexp/find_test.go:148
148 func TestFind(t *testing.T) {
</pre>
<p>
Execution has paused at the breakpoint.
See which goroutines are running, and what they're doing:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>info goroutines</b>
1 waiting runtime.gosched
* 13 running runtime.goexit
</pre>
<p>
the one marked with the <code>*</code> is the current goroutine.
</p>
<h3 id="Inspecting_the_stack">Inspecting the stack</h3>
<p>
Look at the stack trace for where weve paused the program:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>bt</b> <i># backtrace</i>
#0 regexp.TestFind (t=0xf8404a89c0) at /home/user/go/src/regexp/find_test.go:148
#1 0x000000000042f60b in testing.tRunner (t=0xf8404a89c0, test=0x573720) at /home/user/go/src/testing/testing.go:156
#2 0x000000000040df64 in runtime.initdone () at /home/user/go/src/runtime/proc.c:242
#3 0x000000f8404a89c0 in ?? ()
#4 0x0000000000573720 in ?? ()
#5 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
</pre>
<p>
The other goroutine, number 1, is stuck in <code>runtime.gosched</code>, blocked on a channel receive:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>goroutine 1 bt</b>
#0 0x000000000040facb in runtime.gosched () at /home/user/go/src/runtime/proc.c:873
#1 0x00000000004031c9 in runtime.chanrecv (c=void, ep=void, selected=void, received=void)
at /home/user/go/src/runtime/chan.c:342
#2 0x0000000000403299 in runtime.chanrecv1 (t=void, c=void) at/home/user/go/src/runtime/chan.c:423
#3 0x000000000043075b in testing.RunTests (matchString={void (struct string, struct string, bool *, error *)}
0x7ffff7f9ef60, tests= []testing.InternalTest = {...}) at /home/user/go/src/testing/testing.go:201
#4 0x00000000004302b1 in testing.Main (matchString={void (struct string, struct string, bool *, error *)}
0x7ffff7f9ef80, tests= []testing.InternalTest = {...}, benchmarks= []testing.InternalBenchmark = {...})
at /home/user/go/src/testing/testing.go:168
#5 0x0000000000400dc1 in main.main () at /home/user/go/src/regexp/_testmain.go:98
#6 0x00000000004022e7 in runtime.mainstart () at /home/user/go/src/runtime/amd64/asm.s:78
#7 0x000000000040ea6f in runtime.initdone () at /home/user/go/src/runtime/proc.c:243
#8 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
</pre>
<p>
The stack frame shows were currently executing the <code>regexp.TestFind</code> function, as expected.
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>info frame</b>
Stack level 0, frame at 0x7ffff7f9ff88:
rip = 0x425530 in regexp.TestFind (/home/user/go/src/regexp/find_test.go:148);
saved rip 0x430233
called by frame at 0x7ffff7f9ffa8
source language minimal.
Arglist at 0x7ffff7f9ff78, args: t=0xf840688b60
Locals at 0x7ffff7f9ff78, Previous frame's sp is 0x7ffff7f9ff88
Saved registers:
rip at 0x7ffff7f9ff80
</pre>
<p>
The command <code>info locals</code> lists all variables local to the function and their values, but is a bit
dangerous to use, since it will also try to print uninitialized variables. Uninitialized slices may cause gdb to try
to print arbitrary large arrays.
</p>
<p>
The functions arguments:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>info args</b>
t = 0xf840688b60
</pre>
<p>
When printing the argument, notice that its a pointer to a
<code>Regexp</code> value. Note that GDB has incorrectly put the <code>*</code>
on the right-hand side of the type name and made up a 'struct' keyword, in traditional C style.
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>p re</b>
(gdb) p t
$1 = (struct testing.T *) 0xf840688b60
(gdb) p t
$1 = (struct testing.T *) 0xf840688b60
(gdb) p *t
$2 = {errors = "", failed = false, ch = 0xf8406f5690}
(gdb) p *t-&gt;ch
$3 = struct hchan&lt;*testing.T&gt;
</pre>
<p>
That <code>struct hchan&lt;*testing.T&gt;</code> is the
runtime-internal representation of a channel. It is currently empty,
or gdb would have pretty-printed its contents.
</p>
<p>
Stepping forward:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>n</b> <i># execute next line</i>
149 for _, test := range findTests {
(gdb) <i># enter is repeat</i>
150 re := MustCompile(test.pat)
(gdb) <b>p test.pat</b>
$4 = ""
(gdb) <b>p re</b>
$5 = (struct regexp.Regexp *) 0xf84068d070
(gdb) <b>p *re</b>
$6 = {expr = "", prog = 0xf840688b80, prefix = "", prefixBytes = []uint8, prefixComplete = true,
prefixRune = 0, cond = 0 '\000', numSubexp = 0, longest = false, mu = {state = 0, sema = 0},
machine = []*regexp.machine}
(gdb) <b>p *re->prog</b>
$7 = {Inst = []regexp/syntax.Inst = {{Op = 5 '\005', Out = 0, Arg = 0, Rune = []int}, {Op =
6 '\006', Out = 2, Arg = 0, Rune = []int}, {Op = 4 '\004', Out = 0, Arg = 0, Rune = []int}},
Start = 1, NumCap = 2}
</pre>
<p>
We can step into the <code>String</code>function call with <code>"s"</code>:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>s</b>
regexp.(*Regexp).String (re=0xf84068d070, noname=void) at /home/user/go/src/regexp/regexp.go:97
97 func (re *Regexp) String() string {
</pre>
<p>
Get a stack trace to see where we are:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>bt</b>
#0 regexp.(*Regexp).String (re=0xf84068d070, noname=void)
at /home/user/go/src/regexp/regexp.go:97
#1 0x0000000000425615 in regexp.TestFind (t=0xf840688b60)
at /home/user/go/src/regexp/find_test.go:151
#2 0x0000000000430233 in testing.tRunner (t=0xf840688b60, test=0x5747b8)
at /home/user/go/src/testing/testing.go:156
#3 0x000000000040ea6f in runtime.initdone () at /home/user/go/src/runtime/proc.c:243
....
</pre>
<p>
Look at the source code:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>l</b>
92 mu sync.Mutex
93 machine []*machine
94 }
95
96 // String returns the source text used to compile the regular expression.
97 func (re *Regexp) String() string {
98 return re.expr
99 }
100
101 // Compile parses a regular expression and returns, if successful,
</pre>
<h3 id="Pretty_Printing">Pretty Printing</h3>
<p>
GDB's pretty printing mechanism is triggered by regexp matches on type names. An example for slices:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>p utf</b>
$22 = []uint8 = {0 '\000', 0 '\000', 0 '\000', 0 '\000'}
</pre>
<p>
Since slices, arrays and strings are not C pointers, GDB can't interpret the subscripting operation for you, but
you can look inside the runtime representation to do that (tab completion helps here):
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>p slc</b>
$11 = []int = {0, 0}
(gdb) <b>p slc-&gt;</b><i>&lt;TAB&gt;</i>
array slc len
(gdb) <b>p slc->array</b>
$12 = (int *) 0xf84057af00
(gdb) <b>p slc->array[1]</b>
$13 = 0</pre>
<p>
The extension functions $len and $cap work on strings, arrays and slices:
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>p $len(utf)</b>
$23 = 4
(gdb) <b>p $cap(utf)</b>
$24 = 4
</pre>
<p>
Channels and maps are 'reference' types, which gdb shows as pointers to C++-like types <code>hash&lt;int,string&gt;*</code>. Dereferencing will trigger prettyprinting
</p>
<p>
Interfaces are represented in the runtime as a pointer to a type descriptor and a pointer to a value. The Go GDB runtime extension decodes this and automatically triggers pretty printing for the runtime type. The extension function <code>$dtype</code> decodes the dynamic type for you (examples are taken from a breakpoint at <code>regexp.go</code> line 293.)
</p>
<pre>
(gdb) <b>p i</b>
$4 = {str = "cbb"}
(gdb) <b>whatis i</b>
type = regexp.input
(gdb) <b>p $dtype(i)</b>
$26 = (struct regexp.inputBytes *) 0xf8400b4930
(gdb) <b>iface i</b>
regexp.input: struct regexp.inputBytes *
</pre>

455
doc/devel/pre_go1.html Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,455 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Pre-Go 1 Release History"
}-->
<p>
This page summarizes the changes between stable releases of Go prior to Go 1.
See the <a href="release.html">Release History</a> page for notes on recent releases.
</p>
<h2 id="r60">r60 (released 2011/09/07)</h2>
<p>
The r60 release corresponds to
<code><a href="weekly.html#2011-08-17">weekly.2011-08-17</a></code>.
This section highlights the most significant changes in this release.
For a more detailed summary, see the
<a href="weekly.html#2011-08-17">weekly release notes</a>.
For complete information, see the
<a href="//code.google.com/p/go/source/list?r=release-branch.r60">Mercurial change list</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="r60.lang">Language</h3>
<p>
An "else" block is now required to have braces except if the body of the "else"
is another "if". Since gofmt always puts those braces in anyway,
gofmt-formatted programs will not be affected.
To fix other programs, run gofmt.
</p>
<h3 id="r60.pkg">Packages</h3>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/http/">Package http</a>'s URL parsing and query escaping code
(such as <code>ParseURL</code> and <code>URLEscape</code>) has been moved to
the new <a href="/pkg/url/">url package</a>, with several simplifications to
the names. Client code can be updated automatically with gofix.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/image/">Package image</a> has had significant changes made to the
<code>Pix</code> field of struct types such as
<a href="/pkg/image/#RGBA">image.RGBA</a> and
<a href="/pkg/image/#NRGBA">image.NRGBA</a>.
The <a href="/pkg/image/#Image">image.Image</a> interface type has not changed,
though, and you should not need to change your code if you don't explicitly
refer to <code>Pix</code> fields. For example, if you decode a number of images
using the <a href="/pkg/image/jpeg/">image/jpeg</a> package, compose them using
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/">image/draw</a>, and then encode the result using
<a href="/pkg/img/png">image/png</a>, then your code should still work as
before.
If your code <i>does</i> refer to <code>Pix</code> fields see the
<a href="/doc/devel/weekly.html#2011-07-19">weekly.2011-07-19</a>
snapshot notes for how to update your code.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/template/">Package template</a> has been replaced with a new
templating package (formerly <code>exp/template</code>). The original template
package is still available as <a href="/pkg/old/template/">old/template</a>.
The <code>old/template</code> package is deprecated and will be removed.
The Go tree has been updated to use the new template package. We encourage
users of the old template package to switch to the new one. Code that uses
<code>template</code> or <code>exp/template</code> will need to change its
import lines to <code>"old/template"</code> or <code>"template"</code>,
respectively.
</p>
<h3 id="r60.cmd">Tools</h3>
<p>
<a href="/cmd/goinstall/">Goinstall</a> now uses a new tag selection scheme.
When downloading or updating, goinstall looks for a tag or branch with the
<code>"go."</code> prefix that corresponds to the local Go version. For Go
<code>release.r58</code> it looks for <code>go.r58</code>. For
<code>weekly.2011-06-03</code> it looks for <code>go.weekly.2011-06-03</code>.
If the specific <code>go.X</code> tag or branch is not found, it chooses the
closest earlier version. If an appropriate tag or branch is found, goinstall
uses that version of the code. Otherwise it uses the default version selected
by the version control system. Library authors are encouraged to use the
appropriate tag or branch names in their repositories to make their libraries
more accessible.
</p>
<h3 id="r60.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
r60.1 includes a
<a href="//golang.org/change/1824581bf62d">linker
fix</a>, a pair of
<a href="//golang.org/change/9ef4429c2c64">goplay</a>
<a href="//golang.org/change/d42ed8c3098e">fixes</a>,
and a <code>json</code> package
<a href="//golang.org/change/d5e97874fe84">fix</a> and
a new
<a href="//golang.org/change/4f0e6269213f">struct tag
option</a>.
</p>
<p>
r60.2
<a href="//golang.org/change/ff19536042ac">fixes</a>
a memory leak involving maps.
</p>
<p>
r60.3 fixes a
<a href="//golang.org/change/01fa62f5e4e5">reflect bug</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="r59">r59 (released 2011/08/01)</h2>
<p>
The r59 release corresponds to
<code><a href="weekly.html#2011-07-07">weekly.2011-07-07</a></code>.
This section highlights the most significant changes in this release.
For a more detailed summary, see the
<a href="weekly.html#2011-07-07">weekly release notes</a>.
For complete information, see the
<a href="//code.google.com/p/go/source/list?r=release-branch.r59">Mercurial change list</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="r59.lang">Language</h3>
<p>
This release includes a language change that restricts the use of
<code>goto</code>. In essence, a <code>goto</code> statement outside a block
cannot jump to a label inside that block. Your code may require changes if it
uses <code>goto</code>.
See <a href="//golang.org/change/dc6d3cf9279d">this
changeset</a> for how the new rule affected the Go tree.
</p>
<h3 id="r59.pkg">Packages</h3>
<p>
As usual, <a href="/cmd/gofix/">gofix</a> will handle the bulk of the rewrites
necessary for these changes to package APIs.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/http">Package http</a> has a new
<a href="/pkg/http/#FileSystem">FileSystem</a> interface that provides access
to files. The <a href="/pkg/http/#FileServer">FileServer</a> helper now takes a
<code>FileSystem</code> argument instead of an explicit file system root. By
implementing your own <code>FileSystem</code> you can use the
<code>FileServer</code> to serve arbitrary data.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/os/">Package os</a>'s <code>ErrorString</code> type has been
hidden. Most uses of <code>os.ErrorString</code> can be replaced with
<a href="/pkg/os/#NewError">os.NewError</a>.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/reflect/">Package reflect</a> supports a new struct tag scheme
that enables sharing of struct tags between multiple packages.
In this scheme, the tags must be of the form:
</p>
<pre>
`key:"value" key2:"value2"`
</pre>
<p>
The <a href="/pkg/reflect/#StructField">StructField</a> type's Tag field now
has type <a href="/pkg/reflect/#StructTag">StructTag</a>, which has a
<code>Get</code> method. Clients of <a href="/pkg/json">json</a> and
<a href="/pkg/xml">xml</a> will need to be updated. Code that says
</p>
<pre>
type T struct {
X int "name"
}
</pre>
<p>
should become
</p>
<pre>
type T struct {
X int `json:"name"` // or `xml:"name"`
}
</pre>
<p>
Use <a href="/cmd/govet/">govet</a> to identify struct tags that need to be
changed to use the new syntax.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/sort/">Package sort</a>'s <code>IntArray</code> type has been
renamed to <a href="/pkg/sort/#IntSlice">IntSlice</a>, and similarly for
<a href="/pkg/sort/#Float64Slice">Float64Slice</a> and
<a href="/pkg/sort/#StringSlice">StringSlice</a>.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/strings/">Package strings</a>'s <code>Split</code> function has
itself been split into <a href="/pkg/strings/#Split">Split</a> and
<a href="/pkg/strings/#SplitN">SplitN</a>.
<code>SplitN</code> is the same as the old <code>Split</code>.
The new <code>Split</code> is equivalent to <code>SplitN</code> with a final
argument of -1.
</p>
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/">Package image/draw</a>'s
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Draw">Draw</a> function now takes an additional
argument, a compositing operator.
If in doubt, use <a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Op">draw.Over</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="r59.cmd">Tools</h3>
<p>
<a href="/cmd/goinstall/">Goinstall</a> now installs packages and commands from
arbitrary remote repositories (not just Google Code, Github, and so on).
See the <a href="/cmd/goinstall/">goinstall documentation</a> for details.
</p>
<h2 id="r58">r58 (released 2011/06/29)</h2>
<p>
The r58 release corresponds to
<code><a href="weekly.html#2011-06-09">weekly.2011-06-09</a></code>
with additional bug fixes.
This section highlights the most significant changes in this release.
For a more detailed summary, see the
<a href="weekly.html#2011-06-09">weekly release notes</a>.
For complete information, see the
<a href="//code.google.com/p/go/source/list?r=release-branch.r58">Mercurial change list</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="r58.lang">Language</h3>
<p>
This release fixes a <a href="//golang.org/change/b720749486e1">use of uninitialized memory in programs that misuse <code>goto</code></a>.
</p>
<h3 id="r58.pkg">Packages</h3>
<p>
As usual, <a href="/cmd/gofix/">gofix</a> will handle the bulk of the rewrites
necessary for these changes to package APIs.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/http/">Package http</a> drops the <code>finalURL</code> return
value from the <a href="/pkg/http/#Client.Get">Client.Get</a> method. The value
is now available via the new <code>Request</code> field on <a
href="/pkg/http/#Response">http.Response</a>.
Most instances of the type map[string][]string in have been
replaced with the new <a href="/pkg/http/#Values">Values</a> type.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/exec/">Package exec</a> has been redesigned with a more
convenient and succinct API.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/strconv/">Package strconv</a>'s <a href="/pkg/strconv/#Quote">Quote</a>
function now escapes only those Unicode code points not classified as printable
by <a href="/pkg/unicode/#IsPrint">unicode.IsPrint</a>.
Previously Quote would escape all non-ASCII characters.
This also affects the <a href="/pkg/fmt/">fmt</a> package's <code>"%q"</code>
formatting directive. The previous quoting behavior is still available via
strconv's new <a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteToASCII">QuoteToASCII</a> function.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/os/signal/">Package os/signal</a>'s
<a href="/pkg/os/#Signal">Signal</a> and
<a href="/pkg/os/#UnixSignal">UnixSignal</a> types have been moved to the
<a href="/pkg/os/">os</a> package.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/">Package image/draw</a> is the new name for
<code>exp/draw</code>. The GUI-related code from <code>exp/draw</code> is now
located in the <a href="/pkg/exp/gui/">exp/gui</a> package.
</p>
<h3 id="r58.cmd">Tools</h3>
<p>
<a href="/cmd/goinstall/">Goinstall</a> now observes the GOPATH environment
variable to build and install your own code and external libraries outside of
the Go tree (and avoid writing Makefiles).
</p>
<h3 id="r58.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>r58.1 adds
<a href="//golang.org/change/293c25943586">build</a> and
<a href="//golang.org/change/bf17e96b6582">runtime</a>
changes to make Go run on OS X 10.7 Lion.
</p>
<h2 id="r57">r57 (released 2011/05/03)</h2>
<p>
The r57 release corresponds to
<code><a href="weekly.html#2011-04-27">weekly.2011-04-27</a></code>
with additional bug fixes.
This section highlights the most significant changes in this release.
For a more detailed summary, see the
<a href="weekly.html#2011-04-27">weekly release notes</a>.
For complete information, see the
<a href="//code.google.com/p/go/source/list?r=release-branch.r57">Mercurial change list</a>.
</p>
<p>The new <a href="/cmd/gofix">gofix</a> tool finds Go programs that use old APIs and rewrites them to use
newer ones. After you update to a new Go release, gofix helps make the
necessary changes to your programs. Gofix will handle the http, os, and syscall
package changes described below, and we will update the program to keep up with
future changes to the libraries.
Gofix cant
handle all situations perfectly, so read and test the changes it makes before
committing them.
See <a href="//blog.golang.org/2011/04/introducing-gofix.html">the gofix blog post</a> for more
information.</p>
<h3 id="r57.lang">Language</h3>
<p>
<a href="/doc/go_spec.html#Receive_operator">Multiple assignment syntax</a> replaces the <code>closed</code> function.
The syntax for channel
receives allows an optional second assigned value, a boolean value
indicating whether the channel is closed. This code:
</p>
<pre>
v := &lt;-ch
if closed(ch) {
// channel is closed
}
</pre>
<p>should now be written as:</p>
<pre>
v, ok := &lt;-ch
if !ok {
// channel is closed
}
</pre>
<p><a href="/doc/go_spec.html#Label_scopes">Unused labels are now illegal</a>, just as unused local variables are.</p>
<h3 id="r57.pkg">Packages</h3>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/gob/">Package gob</a> will now encode and decode values of types that implement the
<a href="/pkg/gob/#GobEncoder">GobEncoder</a> and
<a href="/pkg/gob/#GobDecoder">GobDecoder</a> interfaces. This allows types with unexported
fields to transmit self-consistent descriptions; examples include
<a href="/pkg/big/#Int.GobDecode">big.Int</a> and <a href="/pkg/big/#Rat.GobDecode">big.Rat</a>.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/http/">Package http</a> has been redesigned.
For clients, there are new
<a href="/pkg/http/#Client">Client</a> and <a href="/pkg/http/#Transport">Transport</a>
abstractions that give more control over HTTP details such as headers sent
and redirections followed. These abstractions make it easy to implement
custom clients that add functionality such as <a href="//code.google.com/p/goauth2/source/browse/oauth/oauth.go">OAuth2</a>.
For servers, <a href="/pkg/http/#ResponseWriter">ResponseWriter</a>
has dropped its non-essential methods.
The Hijack and Flush methods are no longer required;
code can test for them by checking whether a specific value implements
<a href="/pkg/http/#Hijacker">Hijacker</a> or <a href="/pkg/http/#Flusher">Flusher</a>.
The RemoteAddr and UsingTLS methods are replaced by <a href="/pkg/http/#Request">Request</a>'s
RemoteAddr and TLS fields.
The SetHeader method is replaced by a Header method;
its result, of type <a href="/pkg/http/#Header">Header</a>,
implements Set and other methods.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/net/">Package net</a>
drops the <code>laddr</code> argument from <a href="/pkg/net/#Conn.Dial">Dial</a>
and drops the <code>cname</code> return value
from <a href="/pkg/net/#LookupHost">LookupHost</a>.
The implementation now uses <a href="/cmd/cgo/">cgo</a> to implement
network name lookups using the C library getaddrinfo(3)
function when possible. This ensures that Go and C programs
resolve names the same way and also avoids the OS X
application-level firewall.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/os/">Package os</a>
introduces simplified <a href="/pkg/os/#File.Open">Open</a>
and <a href="/pkg/os/#File.Create">Create</a> functions.
The original Open is now available as <a href="/pkg/os/#File.OpenFile">OpenFile</a>.
The final three arguments to <a href="/pkg/os/#Process.StartProcess">StartProcess</a>
have been replaced by a pointer to a <a href="/pkg/os/#ProcAttr">ProcAttr</a>.
</p>
<p>
<a href="/pkg/reflect/">Package reflect</a> has been redesigned.
<a href="/pkg/reflect/#Type">Type</a> is now an interface that implements
all the possible type methods.
Instead of a type switch on a Type <code>t</code>, switch on <code>t.Kind()</code>.
<a href="/pkg/reflect/#Value">Value</a> is now a struct value that
implements all the possible value methods.
Instead of a type switch on a Value <code>v</code>, switch on <code>v.Kind()</code>.
Typeof and NewValue are now called <a href="/pkg/reflect/#Type.TypeOf">TypeOf</a> and <a href="/pkg/reflect/#Value.ValueOf">ValueOf</a>
To create a writable Value, use <code>New(t).Elem()</code> instead of <code>Zero(t)</code>.
See <a href="//golang.org/change/843855f3c026">the change description</a>
for the full details.
The new API allows a more efficient implementation of Value
that avoids many of the allocations required by the previous API.
</p>
<p>
Remember that gofix will handle the bulk of the rewrites
necessary for these changes to package APIs.
</p>
<h3 id="r57.cmd">Tools</h3>
<p><a href="/cmd/gofix/">Gofix</a>, a new command, is described above.</p>
<p>
<a href="/cmd/gotest/">Gotest</a> is now a Go program instead of a shell script.
The new <code>-test.short</code> flag in combination with package testing's Short function
allows you to write tests that can be run in normal or &ldquo;short&rdquo; mode;
all.bash runs tests in short mode to reduce installation time.
The Makefiles know about the flag: use <code>make testshort</code>.
</p>
<p>
The run-time support now implements CPU and memory profiling.
Gotest's new
<a href="/cmd/gotest/"><code>-test.cpuprofile</code> and
<code>-test.memprofile</code> flags</a> make it easy to
profile tests.
To add profiling to your web server, see the <a href="/pkg/http/pprof/">http/pprof</a>
documentation.
For other uses, see the <a href="/pkg/runtime/pprof/">runtime/pprof</a> documentation.
</p>
<h3 id="r57.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>r57.1 fixes a <a href="//golang.org/change/ff2bc62726e7145eb2ecc1e0f076998e4a8f86f0">nil pointer dereference in http.FormFile</a>.</p>
<p>r57.2 fixes a <a href="//golang.org/change/063b0ff67d8277df03c956208abc068076818dae">use of uninitialized memory in programs that misuse <code>goto</code></a>.</p>
<h2 id="r56">r56 (released 2011/03/16)</h2>
<p>
The r56 release was the first stable release and corresponds to
<code><a href="weekly.html#2011-03-07">weekly.2011-03-07.1</a></code>.
The numbering starts at 56 because before this release,
what we now consider weekly snapshots were called releases.
</p>

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@@ -0,0 +1,417 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Release History"
}-->
<p>This page summarizes the changes between official stable releases of Go.
The <a href="//golang.org/change">change log</a> has the full details.</p>
<p>To update to a specific release, use:</p>
<pre>
git pull
git checkout <i>release-branch</i>
</pre>
<h2 id="policy">Release Policy</h2>
<p>
Each major Go release is supported until there are two newer major releases.
For example, Go 1.8 is supported until Go 1.10 is released,
and Go 1.9 is supported until Go 1.11 is released.
We fix critical problems, including <a href="/security">critical security problems</a>,
in supported releases as needed by issuing minor revisions
(for example, Go 1.9.1, Go 1.9.2, and so on).
</p>
<h2 id="go1.9">go1.9 (released 2017/08/24)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.9 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.9">Go 1.9 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.9.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.9.1 (released 2017/10/04) includes two security fixes.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.9.1">Go
1.9.1 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.9.2 (released 2017/10/25) includes fixes to the compiler, linker, runtime,
documentation, <code>go</code> command,
and the <code>crypto/x509</code>, <code>database/sql</code>, <code>log</code>,
and <code>net/smtp</code> packages.
It includes a fix to a bug introduced in Go 1.9.1 that broke <code>go</code> <code>get</code>
of non-Git repositories under certain conditions.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.9.2">Go
1.9.2 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.9.3 (released 2018/01/22) includes fixes to the compiler, runtime,
and the <code>database/sql</code>, <code>math/big</code>, <code>net/http</code>,
and <code>net/url</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.9.3">Go
1.9.3 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.9.4 (released 2018/02/07) includes a security fix to “go get”.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.9.4">Go
1.9.4</a> milestone on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.9.5 (released 2018/03/28) includes fixes to the compiler, go command, and
<code>net/http/pprof</code> package.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.9.5">Go
1.9.5 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.9.6 (released 2018/05/01) includes fixes to the compiler and go command.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.9.6">Go
1.9.6 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.8">go1.8 (released 2017/02/16)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.8 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.8">Go 1.8 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.8.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.8.1 (released 2017/04/07) includes fixes to the compiler, linker, runtime,
documentation, <code>go</code> command and the <code>crypto/tls</code>,
<code>encoding/xml</code>, <code>image/png</code>, <code>net</code>,
<code>net/http</code>, <code>reflect</code>, <code>text/template</code>,
and <code>time</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.1">Go
1.8.1 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.8.2 (released 2017/05/23) includes a security fix to the
<code>crypto/elliptic</code> package.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.2">Go
1.8.2 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.8.3 (released 2017/05/24) includes fixes to the compiler, runtime,
documentation, and the <code>database/sql</code> package.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.3">Go
1.8.3 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.8.4 (released 2017/10/04) includes two security fixes.
It contains the same fixes as Go 1.9.1 and was released at the same time.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.4">Go
1.8.4 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.8.5 (released 2017/10/25) includes fixes to the compiler, linker, runtime,
documentation, <code>go</code> command,
and the <code>crypto/x509</code> and <code>net/smtp</code> packages.
It includes a fix to a bug introduced in Go 1.8.4 that broke <code>go</code> <code>get</code>
of non-Git repositories under certain conditions.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.5">Go
1.8.5 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.8.6 (released 2018/01/22) includes the the same fix in <code>math/big</code>
as Go 1.9.3 and was released at the same time.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.6">Go
1.8.6 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.8.7 (released 2018/02/07) includes a security fix to “go get”.
It contains the same fix as Go 1.9.4 and was released at the same time.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.7">Go
1.8.7</a> milestone on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.7">go1.7 (released 2016/08/15)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.7 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.7">Go 1.7 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.7.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.7.1 (released 2016/09/07) includes fixes to the compiler, runtime,
documentation, and the <code>compress/flate</code>, <code>hash/crc32</code>,
<code>io</code>, <code>net</code>, <code>net/http</code>,
<code>path/filepath</code>, <code>reflect</code>, and <code>syscall</code>
packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.7.1">Go
1.7.1 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.7.2 should not be used. It was tagged but not fully released.
The release was deferred due to a last minute bug report.
Use go1.7.3 instead, and refer to the summary of changes below.
</p>
<p>
go1.7.3 (released 2016/10/19) includes fixes to the compiler, runtime,
and the <code>crypto/cipher</code>, <code>crypto/tls</code>,
<code>net/http</code>, and <code>strings</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.7.3">Go
1.7.3 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.7.4 (released 2016/12/01) includes two security fixes.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.7.4">Go
1.7.4 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.7.5 (released 2017/01/26) includes fixes to the compiler, runtime,
and the <code>crypto/x509</code> and <code>time</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.7.5">Go
1.7.5 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.7.6 (released 2017/05/23) includes the same security fix as Go 1.8.2 and
was released at the same time.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.8.2">Go
1.8.2 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.6">go1.6 (released 2016/02/17)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.6 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.6">Go 1.6 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.6.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.6.1 (released 2016/04/12) includes two security fixes.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.6.1">Go
1.6.1 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.6.2 (released 2016/04/20) includes fixes to the compiler, runtime, tools,
documentation, and the <code>mime/multipart</code>, <code>net/http</code>, and
<code>sort</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.6.2">Go
1.6.2 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.6.3 (released 2016/07/17) includes security fixes to the
<code>net/http/cgi</code> package and <code>net/http</code> package when used in
a CGI environment.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.6.3">Go
1.6.3 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.6.4 (released 2016/12/01) includes two security fixes.
It contains the same fixes as Go 1.7.4 and was released at the same time.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.7.4">Go
1.7.4 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.5">go1.5 (released 2015/08/19)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.5 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.5">Go 1.5 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.5.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.5.1 (released 2015/09/08) includes bug fixes to the compiler, assembler, and
the <code>fmt</code>, <code>net/textproto</code>, <code>net/http</code>, and
<code>runtime</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.5.1">Go
1.5.1 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.5.2 (released 2015/12/02) includes bug fixes to the compiler, linker, and
the <code>mime/multipart</code>, <code>net</code>, and <code>runtime</code>
packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.5.2">Go
1.5.2 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.5.3 (released 2016/01/13) includes a security fix to the <code>math/big</code> package
affecting the <code>crypto/tls</code> package.
See the <a href="https://golang.org/s/go153announce">release announcement</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.5.4 (released 2016/04/12) includes two security fixes.
It contains the same fixes as Go 1.6.1 and was released at the same time.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.6.1">Go
1.6.1 milestone</a> on our issue tracker for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.4">go1.4 (released 2014/12/10)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.4 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.4">Go 1.4 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.4.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.4.1 (released 2015/01/15) includes bug fixes to the linker and the <code>log</code>, <code>syscall</code>, and <code>runtime</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.4.1">Go 1.4.1 milestone on our issue tracker</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.4.2 (released 2015/02/17) includes bug fixes to the <code>go</code> command, the compiler and linker, and the <code>runtime</code>, <code>syscall</code>, <code>reflect</code>, and <code>math/big</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.4.2">Go 1.4.2 milestone on our issue tracker</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.4.3 (released 2015/09/22) includes security fixes to the <code>net/http</code> package and bug fixes to the <code>runtime</code> package.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/issues?q=milestone%3AGo1.4.3">Go 1.4.3 milestone on our issue tracker</a> for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.3">go1.3 (released 2014/06/18)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.3 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.3">Go 1.3 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.3.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.3.1 (released 2014/08/13) includes bug fixes to the compiler and the <code>runtime</code>, <code>net</code>, and <code>crypto/rsa</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.3.1">change history</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.3.2 (released 2014/09/25) includes bug fixes to cgo and the crypto/tls packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.3.2">change history</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.3.3 (released 2014/09/30) includes further bug fixes to cgo, the runtime package, and the nacl port.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.3.3">change history</a> for details.
</p>
<h2 id="go1.2">go1.2 (released 2013/12/01)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.2 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.2">Go 1.2 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.2.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.2.1 (released 2014/03/02) includes bug fixes to the <code>runtime</code>, <code>net</code>, and <code>database/sql</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.2.1">change history</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.2.2 (released 2014/05/05) includes a
<a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.2.2">security fix</a>
that affects the tour binary included in the binary distributions (thanks to Guillaume T).
</p>
<h2 id="go1.1">go1.1 (released 2013/05/13)</h2>
<p>
Go 1.1 is a major release of Go.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.1">Go 1.1 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.1.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.1.1 (released 2013/06/13) includes several compiler and runtime bug fixes.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.1.1">change history</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
go1.1.2 (released 2013/08/13) includes fixes to the <code>gc</code> compiler
and <code>cgo</code>, and the <code>bufio</code>, <code>runtime</code>,
<code>syscall</code>, and <code>time</code> packages.
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/go1.1.2">change history</a> for details.
If you use package syscall's <code>Getrlimit</code> and <code>Setrlimit</code>
functions under Linux on the ARM or 386 architectures, please note change
<a href="//golang.org/cl/11803043">11803043</a>
that fixes <a href="//golang.org/issue/5949">issue 5949</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="go1">go1 (released 2012/03/28)</h2>
<p>
Go 1 is a major release of Go that will be stable in the long term.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1.html">Go 1 Release Notes</a> for more information.
</p>
<p>
It is intended that programs written for Go 1 will continue to compile and run
correctly, unchanged, under future versions of Go 1.
Read the <a href="/doc/go1compat.html">Go 1 compatibility document</a> for more
about the future of Go 1.
</p>
<p>
The go1 release corresponds to
<code><a href="weekly.html#2012-03-27">weekly.2012-03-27</a></code>.
</p>
<h3 id="go1.minor">Minor revisions</h3>
<p>
go1.0.1 (released 2012/04/25) was issued to
<a href="//golang.org/cl/6061043">fix</a> an
<a href="//golang.org/issue/3545">escape analysis bug</a>
that can lead to memory corruption.
It also includes several minor code and documentation fixes.
</p>
<p>
go1.0.2 (released 2012/06/13) was issued to fix two bugs in the implementation
of maps using struct or array keys:
<a href="//golang.org/issue/3695">issue 3695</a> and
<a href="//golang.org/issue/3573">issue 3573</a>.
It also includes many minor code and documentation fixes.
</p>
<p>
go1.0.3 (released 2012/09/21) includes minor code and documentation fixes.
</p>
<p>
See the <a href="https://github.com/golang/go/commits/release-branch.go1">go1 release branch history</a> for the complete list of changes.
</p>
<h2 id="pre.go1">Older releases</h2>
<p>
See the <a href="pre_go1.html">Pre-Go 1 Release History</a> page for notes
on earlier releases.
</p>

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<!--{
"Title": "Documentation",
"Path": "/doc/",
"Template": true
}-->
<p>
The Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more
productive.
</p>
<p>
Go is expressive, concise, clean, and efficient. Its concurrency
mechanisms make it easy to write programs that get the most out of multicore
and networked machines, while its novel type system enables flexible and
modular program construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the
convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time reflection. It's a
fast, statically typed, compiled language that feels like a dynamically typed,
interpreted language.
</p>
<div id="manual-nav"></div>
<h2>Installing Go</h2>
<h3><a href="/doc/install">Getting Started</a></h3>
<p>
Instructions for downloading and installing the Go compilers, tools, and
libraries.
</p>
<h2 id="learning">Learning Go</h2>
<img class="gopher" src="/doc/gopher/doc.png"/>
<h3 id="go_tour">
{{if $.GoogleCN}}
A Tour of Go
{{else}}
<a href="//tour.golang.org/">A Tour of Go</a>
{{end}}
</h3>
<p>
An interactive introduction to Go in three sections.
The first section covers basic syntax and data structures; the second discusses
methods and interfaces; and the third introduces Go's concurrency primitives.
Each section concludes with a few exercises so you can practice what you've
learned. You can {{if not $.GoogleCN}}<a href="//tour.golang.org/">take the tour
online</a> or{{end}} install it locally with:
</p>
<p>
<pre>
$ go get golang.org/x/tour/gotour
</pre>
This will place the <code>gotour</code> binary in your workspace's <code>bin</code> directory.
</p>
<h3 id="code"><a href="code.html">How to write Go code</a></h3>
<p>
{{if not $.GoogleCN}}
Also available as a <a href="//www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCsL89YtqCs">screencast</a>, this
{{else}}
This
{{end}}
doc explains how to use the <a href="/cmd/go/">go command</a>
to fetch, build, and install packages, commands, and run tests.
</p>
<h3 id="editors"><a href="editors.html">Editor plugins and IDEs</a></h3>
<p>
A document that summarizes commonly used editor plugins and IDEs with
Go support.
</p>
<h3 id="effective_go"><a href="effective_go.html">Effective Go</a></h3>
<p>
A document that gives tips for writing clear, idiomatic Go code.
A must read for any new Go programmer. It augments the tour and
the language specification, both of which should be read first.
</p>
<h3 id="faq"><a href="/doc/faq">Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)</a></h3>
<p>
Answers to common questions about Go.
</p>
<h3 id="wiki"><a href="/wiki">The Go Wiki</a></h3>
<p>A wiki maintained by the Go community.</p>
<h4 id="learn_more">More</h4>
<p>
See the <a href="/wiki/Learn">Learn</a> page at the <a href="/wiki">Wiki</a>
for more Go learning resources.
</p>
<h2 id="references">References</h2>
<h3 id="pkg"><a href="/pkg/">Package Documentation</a></h3>
<p>
The documentation for the Go standard library.
</p>
<h3 id="cmd"><a href="/doc/cmd">Command Documentation</a></h3>
<p>
The documentation for the Go tools.
</p>
<h3 id="spec"><a href="/ref/spec">Language Specification</a></h3>
<p>
The official Go Language specification.
</p>
<h3 id="go_mem"><a href="/ref/mem">The Go Memory Model</a></h3>
<p>
A document that specifies the conditions under which reads of a variable in
one goroutine can be guaranteed to observe values produced by writes to the
same variable in a different goroutine.
</p>
<h3 id="release"><a href="/doc/devel/release.html">Release History</a></h3>
<p>A summary of the changes between Go releases.</p>
<h2 id="articles">Articles</h2>
{{if not $.GoogleCN}}
<h3 id="blog"><a href="//blog.golang.org/">The Go Blog</a></h3>
<p>The official blog of the Go project, featuring news and in-depth articles by
the Go team and guests.</p>
{{end}}
<h4>Codewalks</h4>
<p>
Guided tours of Go programs.
</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="/doc/codewalk/functions">First-Class Functions in Go</a></li>
<li><a href="/doc/codewalk/markov">Generating arbitrary text: a Markov chain algorithm</a></li>
<li><a href="/doc/codewalk/sharemem">Share Memory by Communicating</a></li>
<li><a href="/doc/articles/wiki/">Writing Web Applications</a> - building a simple web application.</li>
</ul>
{{if not $.GoogleCN}}
<h4>Language</h4>
<ul>
<li><a href="/blog/json-rpc-tale-of-interfaces">JSON-RPC: a tale of interfaces</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/gos-declaration-syntax">Go's Declaration Syntax</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/defer-panic-and-recover">Defer, Panic, and Recover</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/go-concurrency-patterns-timing-out-and">Go Concurrency Patterns: Timing out, moving on</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/go-slices-usage-and-internals">Go Slices: usage and internals</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/gif-decoder-exercise-in-go-interfaces">A GIF decoder: an exercise in Go interfaces</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/error-handling-and-go">Error Handling and Go</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/organizing-go-code">Organizing Go code</a></li>
</ul>
<h4>Packages</h4>
<ul>
<li><a href="/blog/json-and-go">JSON and Go</a> - using the <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/">json</a> package.</li>
<li><a href="/blog/gobs-of-data">Gobs of data</a> - the design and use of the <a href="/pkg/encoding/gob/">gob</a> package.</li>
<li><a href="/blog/laws-of-reflection">The Laws of Reflection</a> - the fundamentals of the <a href="/pkg/reflect/">reflect</a> package.</li>
<li><a href="/blog/go-image-package">The Go image package</a> - the fundamentals of the <a href="/pkg/image/">image</a> package.</li>
<li><a href="/blog/go-imagedraw-package">The Go image/draw package</a> - the fundamentals of the <a href="/pkg/image/draw/">image/draw</a> package.</li>
</ul>
{{end}}
<h4>Tools</h4>
<ul>
<li><a href="/doc/articles/go_command.html">About the Go command</a> - why we wrote it, what it is, what it's not, and how to use it.</li>
<li><a href="/doc/gdb">Debugging Go Code with GDB</a></li>
<li><a href="/doc/articles/race_detector.html">Data Race Detector</a> - a manual for the data race detector.</li>
<li><a href="/doc/asm">A Quick Guide to Go's Assembler</a> - an introduction to the assembler used by Go.</li>
{{if not $.GoogleCN}}
<li><a href="/blog/c-go-cgo">C? Go? Cgo!</a> - linking against C code with <a href="/cmd/cgo/">cgo</a>.</li>
<li><a href="/blog/godoc-documenting-go-code">Godoc: documenting Go code</a> - writing good documentation for <a href="/cmd/godoc/">godoc</a>.</li>
<li><a href="/blog/profiling-go-programs">Profiling Go Programs</a></li>
<li><a href="/blog/race-detector">Introducing the Go Race Detector</a> - an introduction to the race detector.</li>
{{end}}
</ul>
<h4 id="articles_more">More</h4>
<p>
See the <a href="/wiki/Articles">Articles page</a> at the
<a href="/wiki">Wiki</a> for more Go articles.
</p>
{{if not $.GoogleCN}}
<h2 id="talks">Talks</h2>
<img class="gopher" src="/doc/gopher/talks.png"/>
<h3 id="video_tour_of_go"><a href="http://research.swtch.com/gotour">A Video Tour of Go</a></h3>
<p>
Three things that make Go fast, fun, and productive:
interfaces, reflection, and concurrency. Builds a toy web crawler to
demonstrate these.
</p>
<h3 id="go_code_that_grows"><a href="//vimeo.com/53221560">Code that grows with grace</a></h3>
<p>
One of Go's key design goals is code adaptability; that it should be easy to take a simple design and build upon it in a clean and natural way. In this talk Andrew Gerrand describes a simple "chat roulette" server that matches pairs of incoming TCP connections, and then use Go's concurrency mechanisms, interfaces, and standard library to extend it with a web interface and other features. While the function of the program changes dramatically, Go's flexibility preserves the original design as it grows.
</p>
<h3 id="go_concurrency_patterns"><a href="//www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6kdp27TYZs">Go Concurrency Patterns</a></h3>
<p>
Concurrency is the key to designing high performance network services. Go's concurrency primitives (goroutines and channels) provide a simple and efficient means of expressing concurrent execution. In this talk we see how tricky concurrency problems can be solved gracefully with simple Go code.
</p>
<h3 id="advanced_go_concurrency_patterns"><a href="//www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDDwwePbDtw">Advanced Go Concurrency Patterns</a></h3>
<p>
This talk expands on the <i>Go Concurrency Patterns</i> talk to dive deeper into Go's concurrency primitives.
</p>
<h4 id="talks_more">More</h4>
<p>
See the <a href="/talks">Go Talks site</a> and <a href="/wiki/GoTalks">wiki page</a> for more Go talks.
</p>
{{end}}
<h2 id="nonenglish">Non-English Documentation</h2>
<p>
See the <a href="/wiki/NonEnglish">NonEnglish</a> page
at the <a href="/wiki">Wiki</a> for localized
documentation.
</p>

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<!--{
"Title": "Editor plugins and IDEs",
"Template": true
}-->
<h2 id="introduction">Introduction</h2>
<p>
This document lists commonly used editor plugins and IDEs from the Go ecosystem
that make Go development more productive and seamless.
A comprehensive list of editor support and IDEs for Go development is available at
<a href="http://golang.org/wiki/IDEsAndTextEditorPlugins">the wiki</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="options">Options</h2>
<p>
The Go ecosystem provides a variety of editor plugins and IDEs to enhance your day-to-day
editing, navigation, testing, and debugging experience.
</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://github.com/fatih/vim-go">vim</a>: vim-go plugin provides Go programming language support</li>
<li><a href="https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=lukehoban.Go">Visual Studio Code</a>:
Go extension provides support for the Go programming language</li>
<li><a href="https://www.jetbrains.com/go">Gogland</a>: Gogland is distributed either as a standalone IDE
or as a plugin for the commercial IntelliJ Platform IDEs</li>
<li><a href="https://atom.io/packages/go-plus">Atom</a>: Go-Plus is an Atom package that provides enhanced Go support</li>
</ul>
<p>
Note that these are only a few top solutions; a more comphensive
community-maintained list of
<a href="https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/IDEsAndTextEditorPlugins">IDEs and text editor plugins</a>
is available at the Wiki.
</p>
<p>
Each development environment integrates a number of Go-specific tools.
The following feature matrix lists and compares the most significant features.
</p>
<table class="features-matrix">
<tr>
<th></th>
<th><img title="Vim Go" src="/doc/editors/vimgo.png"><br>vim</th>
<th><img title="Visual Studio Code" src="/doc/editors/vscodego.png"><br>Visual Studio Code</th>
<th><img title="Gogland" src="/doc/editors/gogland.png"><br>Gogland</th>
<th><img title="Go-Plus" src="/doc/editors/go-plus.png"><br>Atom</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="feature-row" colspan="5">Editing features</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Build and run from the editor/IDE</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Autocompletion of identifers (variable, method, and function names)</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Type-aware autocompletion</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Rename identifiers</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Auto format, build, vet, and lint on save</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes<sup>1</sup></td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Auto insert import paths and remove unused on save</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes<sup>2</sup></td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Auto generate JSON, XML tags for struct fields</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="feature-row" colspan="5">Navigation features</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Display documentation inline, or open godoc in browser</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Switch between <code>*.go</code> and <code>*_test.go</code> file</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">No</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Jump to definition and referees</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Look up for interface implementations</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Search for callers and callees</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="feature-row" colspan="5">Testing and debugging features</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Debugger support</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes<sup>3</sup></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Run a single test case, all tests from file, or all tests from a package</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Auto generate tests for packages, files and identifiers</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Debug tests</td>
<td class="no">No</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes<sup>3</sup></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Display test coverage</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
<td class="yes">Yes</td>
</tr>
<tr class="download">
<td></td>
<td><a href="https://github.com/fatih/vim-go">Install<a/></td>
<td><a href="https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=lukehoban.Go">Install<a/></td>
<td><a href="https://www.jetbrains.com/go">Install<a/></td>
<td><a href="https://atom.io/packages/go-plus">Install</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
<sup>1</sup>Possible when enabled via Settings &gt; Go &gt; On Save, <code>go</code> <code>vet</code> and <code>golint</code> are available via plugins. Also runs tests on save if configured.
<br>
<sup>2</sup>Additionally, user input can disambiguate when two or more options are available.
<br>
<sup>3</sup>Available if the <a href="https://atom.io/packages/go-debug">go-debug</a> package is installed.
</p>
</div>
<style>
.features-matrix {
min-width: 800px;
border-collapse: collapse;
}
.features-matrix th {
width: 60px;
text-align: center;
font-size: 14px;
color: #666;
}
.features-matrix th img {
width: 48px;
}
.features-matrix .yes {
text-align: center;
}
.features-matrix .no {
text-align: center;
background-color: #ffe9e9;
}
.features-matrix .download {
font-weight: bold;
text-align: center;
}
.features-matrix td {
padding: 11px 5px 11px 5px;
border-bottom: solid 1px #ebebeb;
}
.features-matrix .feature-row {
background-color: #ebebeb;
font-weight: bold;
}
</style>

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<!--{
"Title": "Contributing to the gccgo frontend"
}-->
<h2>Introduction</h2>
<p>
These are some notes on contributing to the gccgo frontend for GCC.
For information on contributing to parts of Go other than gccgo,
see <a href="/doc/contribute.html">Contributing to the Go project</a>. For
information on building gccgo for yourself,
see <a href="/doc/gccgo_install.html">Setting up and using gccgo</a>.
For more of the gritty details on the process of doing development
with the gccgo frontend,
see <a href="https://go.googlesource.com/gofrontend/+/master/HACKING">the
file HACKING</a> in the gofrontend repository.
</p>
<h2>Legal Prerequisites</h2>
<p>
You must follow the <a href="/doc/contribute.html#copyright">Go copyright
rules</a> for all changes to the gccgo frontend and the associated
libgo library. Code that is part of GCC rather than gccgo must follow
the general <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/contribute.html">GCC
contribution rules</a>.
</p>
<h2>Code</h2>
<p>
The master sources for the gccgo frontend may be found at
<a href="http://go.googlesource.com/gofrontend">http://go.googlesource.com/gofrontend</a>.
They are mirrored
at <a href="http://github.com/golang/gofrontend">http://github.com/golang/gofrontend</a>.
The master sources are not buildable by themselves, but only in
conjunction with GCC (in the future, other compilers may be
supported). Changes made to the gccgo frontend are also applied to
the GCC source code repository hosted at <code>gcc.gnu.org</code>. In
the <code>gofrontend</code> repository, the <code>go</code> directory
is mirrored to the <code>gcc/go/gofrontend</code> directory in the GCC
repository, and the <code>gofrontend</code> <code>libgo</code>
directory is mirrored to the GCC <code>libgo</code> directory. In
addition, the <code>test</code> directory
from <a href="//go.googlesource.com/go">the main Go repository</a>
is mirrored to the <code>gcc/testsuite/go.test/test</code> directory
in the GCC repository.
</p>
<p>
Changes to these directories always flow from the master sources to
the GCC repository. The files should never be changed in the GCC
repository except by changing them in the master sources and mirroring
them.
</p>
<p>
The gccgo frontend is written in C++.
It follows the GNU and GCC coding standards for C++.
In writing code for the frontend, follow the formatting of the
surrounding code.
Almost all GCC-specific code is not in the frontend proper and is
instead in the GCC sources in the <code>gcc/go</code> directory.
</p>
<p>
The run-time library for gccgo is mostly the same as the library
in <a href="//go.googlesource.com/go">the main Go repository</a>.
The library code in the Go repository is periodically merged into
the <code>libgo/go</code> directory of the <code>gofrontend</code> and
then the GCC repositories, using the shell
script <code>libgo/merge.sh</code>. Accordingly, most library changes
should be made in the main Go repository. The files outside
of <code>libgo/go</code> are gccgo-specific; that said, some of the
files in <code>libgo/runtime</code> are based on files
in <code>src/runtime</code> in the main Go repository.
</p>
<h2>Testing</h2>
<p>
All patches must be tested. A patch that introduces new failures is
not acceptable.
</p>
<p>
To run the gccgo test suite, run <code>make check-go</code> in your
build directory. This will run various tests
under <code>gcc/testsuite/go.*</code> and will also run
the <code>libgo</code> testsuite. This copy of the tests from the
main Go repository is run using the DejaGNU script found
in <code>gcc/testsuite/go.test/go-test.exp</code>.
</p>
<p>
Most new tests should be submitted to the main Go repository for later
mirroring into the GCC repository. If there is a need for specific
tests for gccgo, they should go in
the <code>gcc/testsuite/go.go-torture</code>
or <code>gcc/testsuite/go.dg</code> directories in the GCC repository.
</p>
<h2>Submitting Changes</h2>
<p>
Changes to the Go frontend should follow the same process as for the
main Go repository, only for the <code>gofrontend</code> project and
the <code>gofrontend-dev@googlegroups.com</code> mailing list
rather than the <code>go</code> project and the
<code>golang-dev@googlegroups.com</code> mailing list. Those changes
will then be merged into the GCC sources.
</p>

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<!--{
"Title": "Setting up and using gccgo",
"Path": "/doc/install/gccgo"
}-->
<p>
This document explains how to use gccgo, a compiler for
the Go language. The gccgo compiler is a new frontend
for GCC, the widely used GNU compiler. Although the
frontend itself is under a BSD-style license, gccgo is
normally used as part of GCC and is then covered by
the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html">GNU General Public
License</a> (the license covers gccgo itself as part of GCC; it
does not cover code generated by gccgo).
</p>
<p>
Note that gccgo is not the <code>gc</code> compiler; see
the <a href="/doc/install.html">Installing Go</a> instructions for that
compiler.
</p>
<h2 id="Releases">Releases</h2>
<p>
The simplest way to install gccgo is to install a GCC binary release
built to include Go support. GCC binary releases are available from
<a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/install/binaries.html">various
websites</a> and are typically included as part of GNU/Linux
distributions. We expect that most people who build these binaries
will include Go support.
</p>
<p>
The GCC 4.7.1 release and all later 4.7 releases include a complete
<a href="/doc/go1.html">Go 1</a> compiler and libraries.
</p>
<p>
Due to timing, the GCC 4.8.0 and 4.8.1 releases are close to but not
identical to Go 1.1. The GCC 4.8.2 release includes a complete Go
1.1.2 implementation.
</p>
<p>
The GCC 4.9 releases include a complete Go 1.2 implementation.
</p>
<p>
The GCC 5 releases include a complete implementation of the Go 1.4
user libraries. The Go 1.4 runtime is not fully merged, but that
should not be visible to Go programs.
</p>
<p>
The GCC 6 releases include a complete implementation of the Go 1.6.1
user libraries. The Go 1.6 runtime is not fully merged, but that
should not be visible to Go programs.
</p>
<p>
The GCC 7 releases are expected to include a complete implementation
of the Go 1.8 user libraries. As with earlier releases, the Go 1.8
runtime is not fully merged, but that should not be visible to Go
programs.
</p>
<h2 id="Source_code">Source code</h2>
<p>
If you cannot use a release, or prefer to build gccgo for
yourself,
the gccgo source code is accessible via Subversion. The
GCC web site
has <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/svn.html">instructions for getting the
GCC source code</a>. The gccgo source code is included. As a
convenience, a stable version of the Go support is available in
a branch of the main GCC code
repository: <code>svn://gcc.gnu.org/svn/gcc/branches/gccgo</code>.
This branch is periodically updated with stable Go compiler sources.
</p>
<p>
Note that although <code>gcc.gnu.org</code> is the most convenient way
to get the source code for the Go frontend, it is not where the master
sources live. If you want to contribute changes to the Go frontend
compiler, see <a href="/doc/gccgo_contribute.html">Contributing to
gccgo</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="Building">Building</h2>
<p>
Building gccgo is just like building GCC
with one or two additional options. See
the <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/install/">instructions on the gcc web
site</a>. When you run <code>configure</code>, add the
option <code>--enable-languages=c,c++,go</code> (along with other
languages you may want to build). If you are targeting a 32-bit x86,
then you will want to build gccgo to default to
supporting locked compare and exchange instructions; do this by also
using the <code>configure</code> option <code>--with-arch=i586</code>
(or a newer architecture, depending on where you need your programs to
run). If you are targeting a 64-bit x86, but sometimes want to use
the <code>-m32</code> option, then use the <code>configure</code>
option <code>--with-arch-32=i586</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="Gold">Gold</h3>
<p>
On x86 GNU/Linux systems the gccgo compiler is able to
use a small discontiguous stack for goroutines. This permits programs
to run many more goroutines, since each goroutine can use a relatively
small stack. Doing this requires using the gold linker version 2.22
or later. You can either install GNU binutils 2.22 or later, or you
can build gold yourself.
</p>
<p>
To build gold yourself, build the GNU binutils,
using <code>--enable-gold=default</code> when you run
the <code>configure</code> script. Before building, you must install
the flex and bison packages. A typical sequence would look like
this (you can replace <code>/opt/gold</code> with any directory to
which you have write access):
</p>
<pre>
cvs -z 9 -d :pserver:anoncvs@sourceware.org:/cvs/src login
[password is "anoncvs"]
[The next command will create a directory named src, not binutils]
cvs -z 9 -d :pserver:anoncvs@sourceware.org:/cvs/src co binutils
mkdir binutils-objdir
cd binutils-objdir
../src/configure --enable-gold=default --prefix=/opt/gold
make
make install
</pre>
<p>
However you install gold, when you configure gccgo, use the
option <code>--with-ld=<var>GOLD_BINARY</var></code>.
</p>
<h3 id="Prerequisites">Prerequisites</h3>
<p>
A number of prerequisites are required to build GCC, as
described on
the <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/install/prerequisites.html">gcc web
site</a>. It is important to install all the prerequisites before
running the gcc <code>configure</code> script.
The prerequisite libraries can be conveniently downloaded using the
script <code>contrib/download_prerequisites</code> in the GCC sources.
<h3 id="Build_commands">Build commands</h3>
<p>
Once all the prerequisites are installed, then a typical build and
install sequence would look like this (only use
the <code>--with-ld</code> option if you are using the gold linker as
described above):
</p>
<pre>
svn checkout svn://gcc.gnu.org/svn/gcc/branches/gccgo gccgo
mkdir objdir
cd objdir
../gccgo/configure --prefix=/opt/gccgo --enable-languages=c,c++,go --with-ld=/opt/gold/bin/ld
make
make install
</pre>
<h2 id="Using_gccgo">Using gccgo</h2>
<p>
The gccgo compiler works like other gcc frontends. As of GCC 5 the gccgo
installation also includes a version of the <code>go</code> command,
which may be used to build Go programs as described at
<a href="https://golang.org/cmd/go">https://golang.org/cmd/go</a>.
</p>
<p>
To compile a file without using the <code>go</code> command:
</p>
<pre>
gccgo -c file.go
</pre>
<p>
That produces <code>file.o</code>. To link files together to form an
executable:
</p>
<pre>
gccgo -o file file.o
</pre>
<p>
To run the resulting file, you will need to tell the program where to
find the compiled Go packages. There are a few ways to do this:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>
Set the <code>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</code> environment variable:
</p>
<pre>
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${prefix}/lib/gcc/MACHINE/VERSION
[or]
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${prefix}/lib64/gcc/MACHINE/VERSION
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
</pre>
<p>
Here <code>${prefix}</code> is the <code>--prefix</code> option used
when building gccgo. For a binary install this is
normally <code>/usr</code>. Whether to use <code>lib</code>
or <code>lib64</code> depends on the target.
Typically <code>lib64</code> is correct for x86_64 systems,
and <code>lib</code> is correct for other systems. The idea is to
name the directory where <code>libgo.so</code> is found.
</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>
Passing a <code>-Wl,-R</code> option when you link (replace lib with
lib64 if appropriate for your system):
</p>
<pre>
go build -gccgoflags -Wl,-R,${prefix}/lib/gcc/MACHINE/VERSION
[or]
gccgo -o file file.o -Wl,-R,${prefix}/lib/gcc/MACHINE/VERSION
</pre>
</li>
<li>
<p>
Use the <code>-static-libgo</code> option to link statically against
the compiled packages.
</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>
Use the <code>-static</code> option to do a fully static link (the
default for the <code>gc</code> compiler).
</p>
</li>
</ul>
<h2 id="Options">Options</h2>
<p>
The gccgo compiler supports all GCC options
that are language independent, notably the <code>-O</code>
and <code>-g</code> options.
</p>
<p>
The <code>-fgo-pkgpath=PKGPATH</code> option may be used to set a
unique prefix for the package being compiled.
This option is automatically used by the go command, but you may want
to use it if you invoke gccgo directly.
This option is intended for use with large
programs that contain many packages, in order to allow multiple
packages to use the same identifier as the package name.
The <code>PKGPATH</code> may be any string; a good choice for the
string is the path used to import the package.
</p>
<p>
The <code>-I</code> and <code>-L</code> options, which are synonyms
for the compiler, may be used to set the search path for finding
imports.
These options are not needed if you build with the go command.
</p>
<h2 id="Imports">Imports</h2>
<p>
When you compile a file that exports something, the export
information will be stored directly in the object file.
If you build with gccgo directly, rather than with the go command,
then when you import a package, you must tell gccgo how to find the
file.
</p>
<p>
When you import the package <var>FILE</var> with gccgo,
it will look for the import data in the following files, and use the
first one that it finds.
<ul>
<li><code><var>FILE</var>.gox</code>
<li><code>lib<var>FILE</var>.so</code>
<li><code>lib<var>FILE</var>.a</code>
<li><code><var>FILE</var>.o</code>
</ul>
<p>
<code><var>FILE</var>.gox</code>, when used, will typically contain
nothing but export data. This can be generated from
<code><var>FILE</var>.o</code> via
</p>
<pre>
objcopy -j .go_export FILE.o FILE.gox
</pre>
<p>
The gccgo compiler will look in the current
directory for import files. In more complex scenarios you
may pass the <code>-I</code> or <code>-L</code> option to
gccgo. Both options take directories to search. The
<code>-L</code> option is also passed to the linker.
</p>
<p>
The gccgo compiler does not currently (2015-06-15) record
the file name of imported packages in the object file. You must
arrange for the imported data to be linked into the program.
Again, this is not necessary when building with the go command.
</p>
<pre>
gccgo -c mypackage.go # Exports mypackage
gccgo -c main.go # Imports mypackage
gccgo -o main main.o mypackage.o # Explicitly links with mypackage.o
</pre>
<h2 id="Debugging">Debugging</h2>
<p>
If you use the <code>-g</code> option when you compile, you can run
<code>gdb</code> on your executable. The debugger has only limited
knowledge about Go. You can set breakpoints, single-step,
etc. You can print variables, but they will be printed as though they
had C/C++ types. For numeric types this doesn't matter. Go strings
and interfaces will show up as two-element structures. Go
maps and channels are always represented as C pointers to run-time
structures.
</p>
<h2 id="C_Interoperability">C Interoperability</h2>
<p>
When using gccgo there is limited interoperability with C,
or with C++ code compiled using <code>extern "C"</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="Types">Types</h3>
<p>
Basic types map directly: an <code>int32</code> in Go is
an <code>int32_t</code> in C, an <code>int64</code> is
an <code>int64_t</code>, etc.
The Go type <code>int</code> is an integer that is the same size as a
pointer, and as such corresponds to the C type <code>intptr_t</code>.
Go <code>byte</code> is equivalent to C <code>unsigned char</code>.
Pointers in Go are pointers in C.
A Go <code>struct</code> is the same as C <code>struct</code> with the
same fields and types.
</p>
<p>
The Go <code>string</code> type is currently defined as a two-element
structure (this is <b style="color: red;">subject to change</b>):
</p>
<pre>
struct __go_string {
const unsigned char *__data;
intptr_t __length;
};
</pre>
<p>
You can't pass arrays between C and Go. However, a pointer to an
array in Go is equivalent to a C pointer to the
equivalent of the element type.
For example, Go <code>*[10]int</code> is equivalent to C <code>int*</code>,
assuming that the C pointer does point to 10 elements.
</p>
<p>
A slice in Go is a structure. The current definition is
(this is <b style="color: red;">subject to change</b>):
</p>
<pre>
struct __go_slice {
void *__values;
intptr_t __count;
intptr_t __capacity;
};
</pre>
<p>
The type of a Go function is a pointer to a struct (this is
<b style="color: red;">subject to change</b>). The first field in the
struct points to the code of the function, which will be equivalent to
a pointer to a C function whose parameter types are equivalent, with
an additional trailing parameter. The trailing parameter is the
closure, and the argument to pass is a pointer to the Go function
struct.
When a Go function returns more than one value, the C function returns
a struct. For example, these functions are roughly equivalent:
</p>
<pre>
func GoFunction(int) (int, float64)
struct { int i; float64 f; } CFunction(int, void*)
</pre>
<p>
Go <code>interface</code>, <code>channel</code>, and <code>map</code>
types have no corresponding C type (<code>interface</code> is a
two-element struct and <code>channel</code> and <code>map</code> are
pointers to structs in C, but the structs are deliberately undocumented). C
<code>enum</code> types correspond to some integer type, but precisely
which one is difficult to predict in general; use a cast. C <code>union</code>
types have no corresponding Go type. C <code>struct</code> types containing
bitfields have no corresponding Go type. C++ <code>class</code> types have
no corresponding Go type.
</p>
<p>
Memory allocation is completely different between C and Go, as Go uses
garbage collection. The exact guidelines in this area are undetermined,
but it is likely that it will be permitted to pass a pointer to allocated
memory from C to Go. The responsibility of eventually freeing the pointer
will remain with C side, and of course if the C side frees the pointer
while the Go side still has a copy the program will fail. When passing a
pointer from Go to C, the Go function must retain a visible copy of it in
some Go variable. Otherwise the Go garbage collector may delete the
pointer while the C function is still using it.
</p>
<h3 id="Function_names">Function names</h3>
<p>
Go code can call C functions directly using a Go extension implemented
in gccgo: a function declaration may be preceded by
<code>//extern NAME</code>. For example, here is how the C function
<code>open</code> can be declared in Go:
</p>
<pre>
//extern open
func c_open(name *byte, mode int, perm int) int
</pre>
<p>
The C function naturally expects a NUL-terminated string, which in
Go is equivalent to a pointer to an array (not a slice!) of
<code>byte</code> with a terminating zero byte. So a sample call
from Go would look like (after importing the <code>syscall</code> package):
</p>
<pre>
var name = [4]byte{'f', 'o', 'o', 0};
i := c_open(&amp;name[0], syscall.O_RDONLY, 0);
</pre>
<p>
(this serves as an example only, to open a file in Go please use Go's
<code>os.Open</code> function instead).
</p>
<p>
Note that if the C function can block, such as in a call
to <code>read</code>, calling the C function may block the Go program.
Unless you have a clear understanding of what you are doing, all calls
between C and Go should be implemented through cgo or SWIG, as for
the <code>gc</code> compiler.
</p>
<p>
The name of Go functions accessed from C is subject to change. At present
the name of a Go function that does not have a receiver is
<code>prefix.package.Functionname</code>. The prefix is set by
the <code>-fgo-prefix</code> option used when the package is compiled;
if the option is not used, the default is <code>go</code>.
To call the function from C you must set the name using
a GCC extension.
</p>
<pre>
extern int go_function(int) __asm__ ("myprefix.mypackage.Function");
</pre>
<h3 id="Automatic_generation_of_Go_declarations_from_C_source_code">
Automatic generation of Go declarations from C source code</h3>
<p>
The Go version of GCC supports automatically generating
Go declarations from C code. The facility is rather awkward, and most
users should use the <a href="/cmd/cgo">cgo</a> program with
the <code>-gccgo</code> option instead.
</p>
<p>
Compile your C code as usual, and add the option
<code>-fdump-go-spec=<var>FILENAME</var></code>. This will create the
file <code><var>FILENAME</var></code> as a side effect of the
compilation. This file will contain Go declarations for the types,
variables and functions declared in the C code. C types that can not
be represented in Go will be recorded as comments in the Go code. The
generated file will not have a <code>package</code> declaration, but
can otherwise be compiled directly by gccgo.
</p>
<p>
This procedure is full of unstated caveats and restrictions and we make no
guarantee that it will not change in the future. It is more useful as a
starting point for real Go code than as a regular procedure.
</p>

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<!--{
"Title": "Go 1.2 Release Notes",
"Path": "/doc/go1.2",
"Template": true
}-->
<h2 id="introduction">Introduction to Go 1.2</h2>
<p>
Since the release of <a href="/doc/go1.1.html">Go version 1.1</a> in April, 2013,
the release schedule has been shortened to make the release process more efficient.
This release, Go version 1.2 or Go 1.2 for short, arrives roughly six months after 1.1,
while 1.1 took over a year to appear after 1.0.
Because of the shorter time scale, 1.2 is a smaller delta than the step from 1.0 to 1.1,
but it still has some significant developments, including
a better scheduler and one new language feature.
Of course, Go 1.2 keeps the <a href="/doc/go1compat.html">promise
of compatibility</a>.
The overwhelming majority of programs built with Go 1.1 (or 1.0 for that matter)
will run without any changes whatsoever when moved to 1.2,
although the introduction of one restriction
to a corner of the language may expose already-incorrect code
(see the discussion of the <a href="#use_of_nil">use of nil</a>).
</p>
<h2 id="language">Changes to the language</h2>
<p>
In the interest of firming up the specification, one corner case has been clarified,
with consequences for programs.
There is also one new language feature.
</p>
<h3 id="use_of_nil">Use of nil</h3>
<p>
The language now specifies that, for safety reasons,
certain uses of nil pointers are guaranteed to trigger a run-time panic.
For instance, in Go 1.0, given code like
</p>
<pre>
type T struct {
X [1<<24]byte
Field int32
}
func main() {
var x *T
...
}
</pre>
<p>
the <code>nil</code> pointer <code>x</code> could be used to access memory incorrectly:
the expression <code>x.Field</code> could access memory at address <code>1<<24</code>.
To prevent such unsafe behavior, in Go 1.2 the compilers now guarantee that any indirection through
a nil pointer, such as illustrated here but also in nil pointers to arrays, nil interface values,
nil slices, and so on, will either panic or return a correct, safe non-nil value.
In short, any expression that explicitly or implicitly requires evaluation of a nil address is an error.
The implementation may inject extra tests into the compiled program to enforce this behavior.
</p>
<p>
Further details are in the
<a href="//golang.org/s/go12nil">design document</a>.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
Most code that depended on the old behavior is erroneous and will fail when run.
Such programs will need to be updated by hand.
</p>
<h3 id="three_index">Three-index slices</h3>
<p>
Go 1.2 adds the ability to specify the capacity as well as the length when using a slicing operation
on an existing array or slice.
A slicing operation creates a new slice by describing a contiguous section of an already-created array or slice:
</p>
<pre>
var array [10]int
slice := array[2:4]
</pre>
<p>
The capacity of the slice is the maximum number of elements that the slice may hold, even after reslicing;
it reflects the size of the underlying array.
In this example, the capacity of the <code>slice</code> variable is 8.
</p>
<p>
Go 1.2 adds new syntax to allow a slicing operation to specify the capacity as well as the length.
A second
colon introduces the capacity value, which must be less than or equal to the capacity of the
source slice or array, adjusted for the origin. For instance,
</p>
<pre>
slice = array[2:4:7]
</pre>
<p>
sets the slice to have the same length as in the earlier example but its capacity is now only 5 elements (7-2).
It is impossible to use this new slice value to access the last three elements of the original array.
</p>
<p>
In this three-index notation, a missing first index (<code>[:i:j]</code>) defaults to zero but the other
two indices must always be specified explicitly.
It is possible that future releases of Go may introduce default values for these indices.
</p>
<p>
Further details are in the
<a href="//golang.org/s/go12slice">design document</a>.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
This is a backwards-compatible change that affects no existing programs.
</p>
<h2 id="impl">Changes to the implementations and tools</h2>
<h3 id="preemption">Pre-emption in the scheduler</h3>
<p>
In prior releases, a goroutine that was looping forever could starve out other
goroutines on the same thread, a serious problem when GOMAXPROCS
provided only one user thread.
In Go 1.2, this is partially addressed: The scheduler is invoked occasionally
upon entry to a function.
This means that any loop that includes a (non-inlined) function call can
be pre-empted, allowing other goroutines to run on the same thread.
</p>
<h3 id="thread_limit">Limit on the number of threads</h3>
<p>
Go 1.2 introduces a configurable limit (default 10,000) to the total number of threads
a single program may have in its address space, to avoid resource starvation
issues in some environments.
Note that goroutines are multiplexed onto threads so this limit does not directly
limit the number of goroutines, only the number that may be simultaneously blocked
in a system call.
In practice, the limit is hard to reach.
</p>
<p>
The new <a href="/pkg/runtime/debug/#SetMaxThreads"><code>SetMaxThreads</code></a> function in the
<a href="/pkg/runtime/debug/"><code>runtime/debug</code></a> package controls the thread count limit.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
Few functions will be affected by the limit, but if a program dies because it hits the
limit, it could be modified to call <code>SetMaxThreads</code> to set a higher count.
Even better would be to refactor the program to need fewer threads, reducing consumption
of kernel resources.
</p>
<h3 id="stack_size">Stack size</h3>
<p>
In Go 1.2, the minimum size of the stack when a goroutine is created has been lifted from 4KB to 8KB.
Many programs were suffering performance problems with the old size, which had a tendency
to introduce expensive stack-segment switching in performance-critical sections.
The new number was determined by empirical testing.
</p>
<p>
At the other end, the new function <a href="/pkg/runtime/debug/#SetMaxStack"><code>SetMaxStack</code></a>
in the <a href="/pkg/runtime/debug"><code>runtime/debug</code></a> package controls
the <em>maximum</em> size of a single goroutine's stack.
The default is 1GB on 64-bit systems and 250MB on 32-bit systems.
Before Go 1.2, it was too easy for a runaway recursion to consume all the memory on a machine.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
The increased minimum stack size may cause programs with many goroutines to use
more memory. There is no workaround, but plans for future releases
include new stack management technology that should address the problem better.
</p>
<h3 id="cgo_and_cpp">Cgo and C++</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> command will now invoke the C++
compiler to build any pieces of the linked-to library that are written in C++;
<a href="/cmd/cgo/">the documentation</a> has more detail.
</p>
<h3 id="go_tools_godoc">Godoc and vet moved to the go.tools subrepository</h3>
<p>
Both binaries are still included with the distribution, but the source code for the
godoc and vet commands has moved to the
<a href="//code.google.com/p/go.tools">go.tools</a> subrepository.
</p>
<p>
Also, the core of the godoc program has been split into a
<a href="https://code.google.com/p/go/source/browse/?repo=tools#hg%2Fgodoc">library</a>,
while the command itself is in a separate
<a href="https://code.google.com/p/go/source/browse/?repo=tools#hg%2Fcmd%2Fgodoc">directory</a>.
The move allows the code to be updated easily and the separation into a library and command
makes it easier to construct custom binaries for local sites and different deployment methods.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
Since godoc and vet are not part of the library,
no client Go code depends on the their source and no updating is required.
</p>
<p>
The binary distributions available from <a href="//golang.org">golang.org</a>
include these binaries, so users of these distributions are unaffected.
</p>
<p>
When building from source, users must use "go get" to install godoc and vet.
(The binaries will continue to be installed in their usual locations, not
<code>$GOPATH/bin</code>.)
</p>
<pre>
$ go get code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/godoc
$ go get code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/vet
</pre>
<h3 id="gccgo">Status of gccgo</h3>
<p>
We expect the future GCC 4.9 release to include gccgo with full
support for Go 1.2.
In the current (4.8.2) release of GCC, gccgo implements Go 1.1.2.
</p>
<h3 id="gc_changes">Changes to the gc compiler and linker</h3>
<p>
Go 1.2 has several semantic changes to the workings of the gc compiler suite.
Most users will be unaffected by them.
</p>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> command now
works when C++ is included in the library being linked against.
See the <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> documentation
for details.
</p>
<p>
The gc compiler displayed a vestigial detail of its origins when
a program had no <code>package</code> clause: it assumed
the file was in package <code>main</code>.
The past has been erased, and a missing <code>package</code> clause
is now an error.
</p>
<p>
On the ARM, the toolchain supports "external linking", which
is a step towards being able to build shared libraries with the gc
tool chain and to provide dynamic linking support for environments
in which that is necessary.
</p>
<p>
In the runtime for the ARM, with <code>5a</code>, it used to be possible to refer
to the runtime-internal <code>m</code> (machine) and <code>g</code>
(goroutine) variables using <code>R9</code> and <code>R10</code> directly.
It is now necessary to refer to them by their proper names.
</p>
<p>
Also on the ARM, the <code>5l</code> linker (sic) now defines the
<code>MOVBS</code> and <code>MOVHS</code> instructions
as synonyms of <code>MOVB</code> and <code>MOVH</code>,
to make clearer the separation between signed and unsigned
sub-word moves; the unsigned versions already existed with a
<code>U</code> suffix.
</p>
<h3 id="cover">Test coverage</h3>
<p>
One major new feature of <a href="/pkg/go/"><code>go test</code></a> is
that it can now compute and, with help from a new, separately installed
"go tool cover" program, display test coverage results.
</p>
<p>
The cover tool is part of the
<a href="https://code.google.com/p/go/source/checkout?repo=tools"><code>go.tools</code></a>
subrepository.
It can be installed by running
</p>
<pre>
$ go get code.google.com/p/go.tools/cmd/cover
</pre>
<p>
The cover tool does two things.
First, when "go test" is given the <code>-cover</code> flag, it is run automatically
to rewrite the source for the package and insert instrumentation statements.
The test is then compiled and run as usual, and basic coverage statistics are reported:
</p>
<pre>
$ go test -cover fmt
ok fmt 0.060s coverage: 91.4% of statements
$
</pre>
<p>
Second, for more detailed reports, different flags to "go test" can create a coverage profile file,
which the cover program, invoked with "go tool cover", can then analyze.
</p>
<p>
Details on how to generate and analyze coverage statistics can be found by running the commands
</p>
<pre>
$ go help testflag
$ go tool cover -help
</pre>
<h3 id="go_doc">The go doc command is deleted</h3>
<p>
The "go doc" command is deleted.
Note that the <a href="/cmd/godoc/"><code>godoc</code></a> tool itself is not deleted,
just the wrapping of it by the <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go</code></a> command.
All it did was show the documents for a package by package path,
which godoc itself already does with more flexibility.
It has therefore been deleted to reduce the number of documentation tools and,
as part of the restructuring of godoc, encourage better options in future.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: For those who still need the precise functionality of running
</p>
<pre>
$ go doc
</pre>
<p>
in a directory, the behavior is identical to running
</p>
<pre>
$ godoc .
</pre>
<h3 id="gocmd">Changes to the go command</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go get</code></a> command
now has a <code>-t</code> flag that causes it to download the dependencies
of the tests run by the package, not just those of the package itself.
By default, as before, dependencies of the tests are not downloaded.
</p>
<h2 id="performance">Performance</h2>
<p>
There are a number of significant performance improvements in the standard library; here are a few of them.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/bzip2/"><code>compress/bzip2</code></a>
decompresses about 30% faster.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/des/"><code>crypto/des</code></a> package
is about five times faster.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> package
encodes about 30% faster.
</li>
<li>
Networking performance on Windows and BSD systems is about 30% faster through the use
of an integrated network poller in the runtime, similar to what was done for Linux and OS X
in Go 1.1.
</li>
</ul>
<h2 id="library">Changes to the standard library</h2>
<h3 id="archive_tar_zip">The archive/tar and archive/zip packages</h3>
<p>
The
<a href="/pkg/archive/tar/"><code>archive/tar</code></a>
and
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/"><code>archive/zip</code></a>
packages have had a change to their semantics that may break existing programs.
The issue is that they both provided an implementation of the
<a href="/pkg/os/#FileInfo"><code>os.FileInfo</code></a>
interface that was not compliant with the specification for that interface.
In particular, their <code>Name</code> method returned the full
path name of the entry, but the interface specification requires that
the method return only the base name (final path element).
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Since this behavior was newly implemented and
a bit obscure, it is possible that no code depends on the broken behavior.
If there are programs that do depend on it, they will need to be identified
and fixed manually.
</p>
<h3 id="encoding">The new encoding package</h3>
<p>
There is a new package, <a href="/pkg/encoding/"><code>encoding</code></a>,
that defines a set of standard encoding interfaces that may be used to
build custom marshalers and unmarshalers for packages such as
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a>,
and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/binary/"><code>encoding/binary</code></a>.
These new interfaces have been used to tidy up some implementations in
the standard library.
</p>
<p>
The new interfaces are called
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#BinaryMarshaler"><code>BinaryMarshaler</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#BinaryUnmarshaler"><code>BinaryUnmarshaler</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextMarshaler"><code>TextMarshaler</code></a>,
and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextUnmarshaler"><code>TextUnmarshaler</code></a>.
Full details are in the <a href="/pkg/encoding/">documentation</a> for the package
and a separate <a href="//golang.org/s/go12encoding">design document</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="fmt_indexed_arguments">The fmt package</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package's formatted print
routines such as <a href="/pkg/fmt/#Printf"><code>Printf</code></a>
now allow the data items to be printed to be accessed in arbitrary order
by using an indexing operation in the formatting specifications.
Wherever an argument is to be fetched from the argument list for formatting,
either as the value to be formatted or as a width or specification integer,
a new optional indexing notation <code>[</code><em>n</em><code>]</code>
fetches argument <em>n</em> instead.
The value of <em>n</em> is 1-indexed.
After such an indexing operating, the next argument to be fetched by normal
processing will be <em>n</em>+1.
</p>
<p>
For example, the normal <code>Printf</code> call
</p>
<pre>
fmt.Sprintf("%c %c %c\n", 'a', 'b', 'c')
</pre>
<p>
would create the string <code>"a b c"</code>, but with indexing operations like this,
</p>
<pre>
fmt.Sprintf("%[3]c %[1]c %c\n", 'a', 'b', 'c')
</pre>
<p>
the result is "<code>"c a b"</code>. The <code>[3]</code> index accesses the third formatting
argument, which is <code>'c'</code>, <code>[1]</code> accesses the first, <code>'a'</code>,
and then the next fetch accesses the argument following that one, <code>'b'</code>.
</p>
<p>
The motivation for this feature is programmable format statements to access
the arguments in different order for localization, but it has other uses:
</p>
<pre>
log.Printf("trace: value %v of type %[1]T\n", expensiveFunction(a.b[c]))
</pre>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: The change to the syntax of format specifications
is strictly backwards compatible, so it affects no working programs.
</p>
<h3 id="text_template">The text/template and html/template packages</h3>
<p>
The
<a href="/pkg/text/template/"><code>text/template</code></a> package
has a couple of changes in Go 1.2, both of which are also mirrored in the
<a href="/pkg/html/template/"><code>html/template</code></a> package.
</p>
<p>
First, there are new default functions for comparing basic types.
The functions are listed in this table, which shows their names and
the associated familiar comparison operator.
</p>
<table cellpadding="0" summary="Template comparison functions">
<tr>
<th width="50"></th><th width="100">Name</th> <th width="50">Operator</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td><code>eq</code></td> <td><code>==</code></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td><code>ne</code></td> <td><code>!=</code></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td><code>lt</code></td> <td><code>&lt;</code></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td><code>le</code></td> <td><code>&lt;=</code></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td><code>gt</code></td> <td><code>&gt;</code></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td><code>ge</code></td> <td><code>&gt;=</code></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
These functions behave slightly differently from the corresponding Go operators.
First, they operate only on basic types (<code>bool</code>, <code>int</code>,
<code>float64</code>, <code>string</code>, etc.).
(Go allows comparison of arrays and structs as well, under some circumstances.)
Second, values can be compared as long as they are the same sort of value:
any signed integer value can be compared to any other signed integer value for example. (Go
does not permit comparing an <code>int8</code> and an <code>int16</code>).
Finally, the <code>eq</code> function (only) allows comparison of the first
argument with one or more following arguments. The template in this example,
</p>
<pre>
{{"{{"}}if eq .A 1 2 3 {{"}}"}} equal {{"{{"}}else{{"}}"}} not equal {{"{{"}}end{{"}}"}}
</pre>
<p>
reports "equal" if <code>.A</code> is equal to <em>any</em> of 1, 2, or 3.
</p>
<p>
The second change is that a small addition to the grammar makes "if else if" chains easier to write.
Instead of writing,
</p>
<pre>
{{"{{"}}if eq .A 1{{"}}"}} X {{"{{"}}else{{"}}"}} {{"{{"}}if eq .A 2{{"}}"}} Y {{"{{"}}end{{"}}"}} {{"{{"}}end{{"}}"}}
</pre>
<p>
one can fold the second "if" into the "else" and have only one "end", like this:
</p>
<pre>
{{"{{"}}if eq .A 1{{"}}"}} X {{"{{"}}else if eq .A 2{{"}}"}} Y {{"{{"}}end{{"}}"}}
</pre>
<p>
The two forms are identical in effect; the difference is just in the syntax.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Neither the "else if" change nor the comparison functions
affect existing programs. Those that
already define functions called <code>eq</code> and so on through a function
map are unaffected because the associated function map will override the new
default function definitions.
</p>
<h3 id="new_packages">New packages</h3>
<p>
There are two new packages.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/"><code>encoding</code></a> package is
<a href="#encoding">described above</a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/image/color/palette/"><code>image/color/palette</code></a> package
provides standard color palettes.
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="minor_library_changes">Minor changes to the library</h3>
<p>
The following list summarizes a number of minor changes to the library, mostly additions.
See the relevant package documentation for more information about each change.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/"><code>archive/zip</code></a> package
adds the
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#File.DataOffset"><code>DataOffset</code></a> accessor
to return the offset of a file's (possibly compressed) data within the archive.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/bufio/"><code>bufio</code></a> package
adds <a href="/pkg/bufio/#Reader.Reset"><code>Reset</code></a>
methods to <a href="/pkg/bufio/#Reader"><code>Reader</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/bufio/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a>.
These methods allow the <a href="/pkg/io/#Reader"><code>Readers</code></a>
and <a href="/pkg/io/#Writer"><code>Writers</code></a>
to be re-used on new input and output readers and writers, saving
allocation overhead.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/bzip2/"><code>compress/bzip2</code></a>
can now decompress concatenated archives.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/"><code>compress/flate</code></a>
package adds a <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/#Writer.Reset"><code>Reset</code></a>
method on the <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a>,
to make it possible to reduce allocation when, for instance, constructing an
archive to hold multiple compressed files.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/"><code>compress/gzip</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a> type adds a
<a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/#Writer.Reset"><code>Reset</code></a>
so it may be reused.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/zlib/"><code>compress/zlib</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/compress/zlib/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a> type adds a
<a href="/pkg/compress/zlib/#Writer.Reset"><code>Reset</code></a>
so it may be reused.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/container/heap/"><code>container/heap</code></a> package
adds a <a href="/pkg/container/heap/#Fix"><code>Fix</code></a>
method to provide a more efficient way to update an item's position in the heap.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/container/list/"><code>container/list</code></a> package
adds the <a href="/pkg/container/list/#List.MoveBefore"><code>MoveBefore</code></a>
and
<a href="/pkg/container/list/#List.MoveAfter"><code>MoveAfter</code></a>
methods, which implement the obvious rearrangement.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/cipher/"><code>crypto/cipher</code></a> package
adds the a new GCM mode (Galois Counter Mode), which is almost always
used with AES encryption.
</li>
<li>
The
<a href="/pkg/crypto/md5/"><code>crypto/md5</code></a> package
adds a new <a href="/pkg/crypto/md5/#Sum"><code>Sum</code></a> function
to simplify hashing without sacrificing performance.
</li>
<li>
Similarly, the
<a href="/pkg/crypto/md5/"><code>crypto/sha1</code></a> package
adds a new <a href="/pkg/crypto/sha1/#Sum"><code>Sum</code></a> function.
</li>
<li>
Also, the
<a href="/pkg/crypto/sha256/"><code>crypto/sha256</code></a> package
adds <a href="/pkg/crypto/sha256/#Sum256"><code>Sum256</code></a>
and <a href="/pkg/crypto/sha256/#Sum224"><code>Sum224</code></a> functions.
</li>
<li>
Finally, the <a href="/pkg/crypto/sha512/"><code>crypto/sha512</code></a> package
adds <a href="/pkg/crypto/sha512/#Sum512"><code>Sum512</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/crypto/sha512/#Sum384"><code>Sum384</code></a> functions.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/"><code>crypto/x509</code></a> package
adds support for reading and writing arbitrary extensions.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package adds
support for TLS 1.1, 1.2 and AES-GCM.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/database/sql/"><code>database/sql</code></a> package adds a
<a href="/pkg/database/sql/#DB.SetMaxOpenConns"><code>SetMaxOpenConns</code></a>
method on <a href="/pkg/database/sql/#DB"><code>DB</code></a> to limit the
number of open connections to the database.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/csv/"><code>encoding/csv</code></a> package
now always allows trailing commas on fields.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/gob/"><code>encoding/gob</code></a> package
now treats channel and function fields of structures as if they were unexported,
even if they are not. That is, it ignores them completely. Previously they would
trigger an error, which could cause unexpected compatibility problems if an
embedded structure added such a field.
The package also now supports the generic <code>BinaryMarshaler</code> and
<code>BinaryUnmarshaler</code> interfaces of the
<a href="/pkg/encoding/"><code>encoding</code></a> package
described above.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> package
now will always escape ampersands as "\u0026" when printing strings.
It will now accept but correct invalid UTF-8 in
<a href="/pkg/encoding/json/#Marshal"><code>Marshal</code></a>
(such input was previously rejected).
Finally, it now supports the generic encoding interfaces of the
<a href="/pkg/encoding/"><code>encoding</code></a> package
described above.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> package
now allows attributes stored in pointers to be marshaled.
It also supports the generic encoding interfaces of the
<a href="/pkg/encoding/"><code>encoding</code></a> package
described above through the new
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Marshaler"><code>Marshaler</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Unmarshaler"><code>Unmarshaler</code></a>,
and related
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#MarshalerAttr"><code>MarshalerAttr</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#UnmarshalerAttr"><code>UnmarshalerAttr</code></a>
interfaces.
The package also adds a
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Encoder.Flush"><code>Flush</code></a> method
to the
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Encoder"><code>Encoder</code></a>
type for use by custom encoders. See the documentation for
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Encoder.EncodeToken"><code>EncodeToken</code></a>
to see how to use it.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/flag/"><code>flag</code></a> package now
has a <a href="/pkg/flag/#Getter"><code>Getter</code></a> interface
to allow the value of a flag to be retrieved. Due to the
Go 1 compatibility guidelines, this method cannot be added to the existing
<a href="/pkg/flag/#Value"><code>Value</code></a>
interface, but all the existing standard flag types implement it.
The package also now exports the <a href="/pkg/flag/#CommandLine"><code>CommandLine</code></a>
flag set, which holds the flags from the command line.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/go/ast/"><code>go/ast</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/go/ast/#SliceExpr"><code>SliceExpr</code></a> struct
has a new boolean field, <code>Slice3</code>, which is set to true
when representing a slice expression with three indices (two colons).
The default is false, representing the usual two-index form.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/go/build/"><code>go/build</code></a> package adds
the <code>AllTags</code> field
to the <a href="/pkg/go/build/#Package"><code>Package</code></a> type,
to make it easier to process build tags.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/image/draw/"><code>image/draw</code></a> package now
exports an interface, <a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Drawer"><code>Drawer</code></a>,
that wraps the standard <a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Draw"><code>Draw</code></a> method.
The Porter-Duff operators now implement this interface, in effect binding an operation to
the draw operator rather than providing it explicitly.
Given a paletted image as its destination, the new
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/#FloydSteinberg"><code>FloydSteinberg</code></a>
implementation of the
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Drawer"><code>Drawer</code></a>
interface will use the Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion algorithm to draw the image.
To create palettes suitable for such processing, the new
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Quantizer"><code>Quantizer</code></a> interface
represents implementations of quantization algorithms that choose a palette
given a full-color image.
There are no implementations of this interface in the library.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/image/gif/"><code>image/gif</code></a> package
can now create GIF files using the new
<a href="/pkg/image/gif/#Encode"><code>Encode</code></a>
and <a href="/pkg/image/gif/#EncodeAll"><code>EncodeAll</code></a>
functions.
Their options argument allows specification of an image
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Quantizer"><code>Quantizer</code></a> to use;
if it is <code>nil</code>, the generated GIF will use the
<a href="/pkg/image/color/palette/#Plan9"><code>Plan9</code></a>
color map (palette) defined in the new
<a href="/pkg/image/color/palette/"><code>image/color/palette</code></a> package.
The options also specify a
<a href="/pkg/image/draw/#Drawer"><code>Drawer</code></a>
to use to create the output image;
if it is <code>nil</code>, Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion is used.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/io/#Copy"><code>Copy</code></a> method of the
<a href="/pkg/io/"><code>io</code></a> package now prioritizes its
arguments differently.
If one argument implements <a href="/pkg/io/#WriterTo"><code>WriterTo</code></a>
and the other implements <a href="/pkg/io/#ReaderFrom"><code>ReaderFrom</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/io/#Copy"><code>Copy</code></a> will now invoke
<a href="/pkg/io/#WriterTo"><code>WriterTo</code></a> to do the work,
so that less intermediate buffering is required in general.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package requires cgo by default
because the host operating system must in general mediate network call setup.
On some systems, though, it is possible to use the network without cgo, and useful
to do so, for instance to avoid dynamic linking.
The new build tag <code>netgo</code> (off by default) allows the construction of a
<code>net</code> package in pure Go on those systems where it is possible.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package adds a new field
<code>DualStack</code> to the <a href="/pkg/net/#Dialer"><code>Dialer</code></a>
struct for TCP connection setup using a dual IP stack as described in
<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6555">RFC 6555</a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package will no longer
transmit cookies that are incorrect according to
<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265">RFC 6265</a>.
It just logs an error and sends nothing.
Also,
the <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#ReadResponse"><code>ReadResponse</code></a>
function now permits the <code>*Request</code> parameter to be <code>nil</code>,
whereupon it assumes a GET request.
Finally, an HTTP server will now serve HEAD
requests transparently, without the need for special casing in handler code.
While serving a HEAD request, writes to a
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Handler"><code>Handler</code></a>'s
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#ResponseWriter"><code>ResponseWriter</code></a>
are absorbed by the
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>Server</code></a>
and the client receives an empty body as required by the HTTP specification.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/os/exec/"><code>os/exec</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/os/exec/#Cmd.StdinPipe"><code>Cmd.StdinPipe</code></a> method
returns an <code>io.WriteCloser</code>, but has changed its concrete
implementation from <code>*os.File</code> to an unexported type that embeds
<code>*os.File</code>, and it is now safe to close the returned value.
Before Go 1.2, there was an unavoidable race that this change fixes.
Code that needs access to the methods of <code>*os.File</code> can use an
interface type assertion, such as <code>wc.(interface{ Sync() error })</code>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/runtime/"><code>runtime</code></a> package relaxes
the constraints on finalizer functions in
<a href="/pkg/runtime/#SetFinalizer"><code>SetFinalizer</code></a>: the
actual argument can now be any type that is assignable to the formal type of
the function, as is the case for any normal function call in Go.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/sort/"><code>sort</code></a> package has a new
<a href="/pkg/sort/#Stable"><code>Stable</code></a> function that implements
stable sorting. It is less efficient than the normal sort algorithm, however.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/strings/"><code>strings</code></a> package adds
an <a href="/pkg/strings/#IndexByte"><code>IndexByte</code></a>
function for consistency with the <a href="/pkg/bytes/"><code>bytes</code></a> package.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/"><code>sync/atomic</code></a> package
adds a new set of swap functions that atomically exchange the argument with the
value stored in the pointer, returning the old value.
The functions are
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#SwapInt32"><code>SwapInt32</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#SwapInt64"><code>SwapInt64</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#SwapUint32"><code>SwapUint32</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#SwapUint64"><code>SwapUint64</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#SwapUintptr"><code>SwapUintptr</code></a>,
and
<a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#SwapPointer"><code>SwapPointer</code></a>,
which swaps an <code>unsafe.Pointer</code>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> package now implements
<a href="/pkg/syscall/#Sendfile"><code>Sendfile</code></a> for Darwin.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package
now exports the <a href="/pkg/testing/#TB"><code>TB</code></a> interface.
It records the methods in common with the
<a href="/pkg/testing/#T"><code>T</code></a>
and
<a href="/pkg/testing/#B"><code>B</code></a> types,
to make it easier to share code between tests and benchmarks.
Also, the
<a href="/pkg/testing/#AllocsPerRun"><code>AllocsPerRun</code></a>
function now quantizes the return value to an integer (although it
still has type <code>float64</code>), to round off any error caused by
initialization and make the result more repeatable.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/text/template/"><code>text/template</code></a> package
now automatically dereferences pointer values when evaluating the arguments
to "escape" functions such as "html", to bring the behavior of such functions
in agreement with that of other printing functions such as "printf".
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/time/"><code>time</code></a> package, the
<a href="/pkg/time/#Parse"><code>Parse</code></a> function
and
<a href="/pkg/time/#Time.Format"><code>Format</code></a>
method
now handle time zone offsets with seconds, such as in the historical
date "1871-01-01T05:33:02+00:34:08".
Also, pattern matching in the formats for those routines is stricter: a non-lowercase letter
must now follow the standard words such as "Jan" and "Mon".
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/unicode/"><code>unicode</code></a> package
adds <a href="/pkg/unicode/#In"><code>In</code></a>,
a nicer-to-use but equivalent version of the original
<a href="/pkg/unicode/#IsOneOf"><code>IsOneOf</code></a>,
to see whether a character is a member of a Unicode category.
</li>
</ul>

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@@ -0,0 +1,608 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Go 1.3 Release Notes",
"Path": "/doc/go1.3",
"Template": true
}-->
<h2 id="introduction">Introduction to Go 1.3</h2>
<p>
The latest Go release, version 1.3, arrives six months after 1.2,
and contains no language changes.
It focuses primarily on implementation work, providing
precise garbage collection,
a major refactoring of the compiler tool chain that results in
faster builds, especially for large projects,
significant performance improvements across the board,
and support for DragonFly BSD, Solaris, Plan 9 and Google's Native Client architecture (NaCl).
It also has an important refinement to the memory model regarding synchronization.
As always, Go 1.3 keeps the <a href="/doc/go1compat.html">promise
of compatibility</a>,
and almost everything
will continue to compile and run without change when moved to 1.3.
</p>
<h2 id="os">Changes to the supported operating systems and architectures</h2>
<h3 id="win2000">Removal of support for Windows 2000</h3>
<p>
Microsoft stopped supporting Windows 2000 in 2010.
Since it has <a href="https://codereview.appspot.com/74790043">implementation difficulties</a>
regarding exception handling (signals in Unix terminology),
as of Go 1.3 it is not supported by Go either.
</p>
<h3 id="dragonfly">Support for DragonFly BSD</h3>
<p>
Go 1.3 now includes experimental support for DragonFly BSD on the <code>amd64</code> (64-bit x86) and <code>386</code> (32-bit x86) architectures.
It uses DragonFly BSD 3.6 or above.
</p>
<h3 id="freebsd">Support for FreeBSD</h3>
<p>
It was not announced at the time, but since the release of Go 1.2, support for Go on FreeBSD
requires FreeBSD 8 or above.
</p>
<p>
As of Go 1.3, support for Go on FreeBSD requires that the kernel be compiled with the
<code>COMPAT_FREEBSD32</code> flag configured.
</p>
<p>
In concert with the switch to EABI syscalls for ARM platforms, Go 1.3 will run only on FreeBSD 10.
The x86 platforms, 386 and amd64, are unaffected.
</p>
<h3 id="nacl">Support for Native Client</h3>
<p>
Support for the Native Client virtual machine architecture has returned to Go with the 1.3 release.
It runs on the 32-bit Intel architectures (<code>GOARCH=386</code>) and also on 64-bit Intel, but using
32-bit pointers (<code>GOARCH=amd64p32</code>).
There is not yet support for Native Client on ARM.
Note that this is Native Client (NaCl), not Portable Native Client (PNaCl).
Details about Native Client are <a href="https://developers.google.com/native-client/dev/">here</a>;
how to set up the Go version is described <a href="//golang.org/wiki/NativeClient">here</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="netbsd">Support for NetBSD</h3>
<p>
As of Go 1.3, support for Go on NetBSD requires NetBSD 6.0 or above.
</p>
<h3 id="openbsd">Support for OpenBSD</h3>
<p>
As of Go 1.3, support for Go on OpenBSD requires OpenBSD 5.5 or above.
</p>
<h3 id="plan9">Support for Plan 9</h3>
<p>
Go 1.3 now includes experimental support for Plan 9 on the <code>386</code> (32-bit x86) architecture.
It requires the <code>Tsemacquire</code> syscall, which has been in Plan 9 since June, 2012.
</p>
<h3 id="solaris">Support for Solaris</h3>
<p>
Go 1.3 now includes experimental support for Solaris on the <code>amd64</code> (64-bit x86) architecture.
It requires illumos, Solaris 11 or above.
</p>
<h2 id="memory">Changes to the memory model</h2>
<p>
The Go 1.3 memory model <a href="https://codereview.appspot.com/75130045">adds a new rule</a>
concerning sending and receiving on buffered channels,
to make explicit that a buffered channel can be used as a simple
semaphore, using a send into the
channel to acquire and a receive from the channel to release.
This is not a language change, just a clarification about an expected property of communication.
</p>
<h2 id="impl">Changes to the implementations and tools</h2>
<h3 id="stacks">Stack</h3>
<p>
Go 1.3 has changed the implementation of goroutine stacks away from the old,
"segmented" model to a contiguous model.
When a goroutine needs more stack
than is available, its stack is transferred to a larger single block of memory.
The overhead of this transfer operation amortizes well and eliminates the old "hot spot"
problem when a calculation repeatedly steps across a segment boundary.
Details including performance numbers are in this
<a href="//golang.org/s/contigstacks">design document</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="garbage_collector">Changes to the garbage collector</h3>
<p>
For a while now, the garbage collector has been <em>precise</em> when examining
values in the heap; the Go 1.3 release adds equivalent precision to values on the stack.
This means that a non-pointer Go value such as an integer will never be mistaken for a
pointer and prevent unused memory from being reclaimed.
</p>
<p>
Starting with Go 1.3, the runtime assumes that values with pointer type
contain pointers and other values do not.
This assumption is fundamental to the precise behavior of both stack expansion
and garbage collection.
Programs that use <a href="/pkg/unsafe/">package unsafe</a>
to store integers in pointer-typed values are illegal and will crash if the runtime detects the behavior.
Programs that use <a href="/pkg/unsafe/">package unsafe</a> to store pointers
in integer-typed values are also illegal but more difficult to diagnose during execution.
Because the pointers are hidden from the runtime, a stack expansion or garbage collection
may reclaim the memory they point at, creating
<a href="//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dangling_pointer">dangling pointers</a>.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Code that uses <code>unsafe.Pointer</code> to convert
an integer-typed value held in memory into a pointer is illegal and must be rewritten.
Such code can be identified by <code>go vet</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="map">Map iteration</h3>
<p>
Iterations over small maps no longer happen in a consistent order.
Go 1 defines that &ldquo;<a href="//golang.org/ref/spec#For_statements">The iteration order over maps
is not specified and is not guaranteed to be the same from one iteration to the next.</a>&rdquo;
To keep code from depending on map iteration order,
Go 1.0 started each map iteration at a random index in the map.
A new map implementation introduced in Go 1.1 neglected to randomize
iteration for maps with eight or fewer entries, although the iteration order
can still vary from system to system.
This has allowed people to write Go 1.1 and Go 1.2 programs that
depend on small map iteration order and therefore only work reliably on certain systems.
Go 1.3 reintroduces random iteration for small maps in order to flush out these bugs.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: If code assumes a fixed iteration order for small maps,
it will break and must be rewritten not to make that assumption.
Because only small maps are affected, the problem arises most often in tests.
</p>
<h3 id="liblink">The linker</h3>
<p>
As part of the general <a href="//golang.org/s/go13linker">overhaul</a> to
the Go linker, the compilers and linkers have been refactored.
The linker is still a C program, but now the instruction selection phase that
was part of the linker has been moved to the compiler through the creation of a new
library called <code>liblink</code>.
By doing instruction selection only once, when the package is first compiled,
this can speed up compilation of large projects significantly.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Although this is a major internal change, it should have no
effect on programs.
</p>
<h3 id="gccgo">Status of gccgo</h3>
<p>
GCC release 4.9 will contain the Go 1.2 (not 1.3) version of gccgo.
The release schedules for the GCC and Go projects do not coincide,
which means that 1.3 will be available in the development branch but
that the next GCC release, 4.10, will likely have the Go 1.4 version of gccgo.
</p>
<h3 id="gocmd">Changes to the go command</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>cmd/go</code></a> command has several new
features.
The <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go run</code></a> and
<a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go test</code></a> subcommands
support a new <code>-exec</code> option to specify an alternate
way to run the resulting binary.
Its immediate purpose is to support NaCl.
</p>
<p>
The test coverage support of the <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go test</code></a>
subcommand now automatically sets the coverage mode to <code>-atomic</code>
when the race detector is enabled, to eliminate false reports about unsafe
access to coverage counters.
</p>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go test</code></a> subcommand
now always builds the package, even if it has no test files.
Previously, it would do nothing if no test files were present.
</p>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go build</code></a> subcommand
supports a new <code>-i</code> option to install dependencies
of the specified target, but not the target itself.
</p>
<p>
Cross compiling with <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> enabled
is now supported.
The CC_FOR_TARGET and CXX_FOR_TARGET environment
variables are used when running all.bash to specify the cross compilers
for C and C++ code, respectively.
</p>
<p>
Finally, the go command now supports packages that import Objective-C
files (suffixed <code>.m</code>) through cgo.
</p>
<h3 id="cgo">Changes to cgo</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cmd/cgo</code></a> command,
which processes <code>import "C"</code> declarations in Go packages,
has corrected a serious bug that may cause some packages to stop compiling.
Previously, all pointers to incomplete struct types translated to the Go type <code>*[0]byte</code>,
with the effect that the Go compiler could not diagnose passing one kind of struct pointer
to a function expecting another.
Go 1.3 corrects this mistake by translating each different
incomplete struct to a different named type.
</p>
<p>
Given the C declaration <code>typedef struct S T</code> for an incomplete <code>struct S</code>,
some Go code used this bug to refer to the types <code>C.struct_S</code> and <code>C.T</code> interchangeably.
Cgo now explicitly allows this use, even for completed struct types.
However, some Go code also used this bug to pass (for example) a <code>*C.FILE</code>
from one package to another.
This is not legal and no longer works: in general Go packages
should avoid exposing C types and names in their APIs.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Code confusing pointers to incomplete types or
passing them across package boundaries will no longer compile
and must be rewritten.
If the conversion is correct and must be preserved,
use an explicit conversion via <a href="/pkg/unsafe/#Pointer"><code>unsafe.Pointer</code></a>.
</p>
<h3 id="swig">SWIG 3.0 required for programs that use SWIG</h3>
<p>
For Go programs that use SWIG, SWIG version 3.0 is now required.
The <a href="/cmd/go"><code>cmd/go</code></a> command will now link the
SWIG generated object files directly into the binary, rather than
building and linking with a shared library.
</p>
<h3 id="gc_flag">Command-line flag parsing</h3>
<p>
In the gc tool chain, the assemblers now use the
same command-line flag parsing rules as the Go flag package, a departure
from the traditional Unix flag parsing.
This may affect scripts that invoke the tool directly.
For example,
<code>go tool 6a -SDfoo</code> must now be written
<code>go tool 6a -S -D foo</code>.
(The same change was made to the compilers and linkers in <a href="/doc/go1.1#gc_flag">Go 1.1</a>.)
</p>
<h3 id="godoc">Changes to godoc</h3>
<p>
When invoked with the <code>-analysis</code> flag,
<a href="//godoc.org/golang.org/x/tools/cmd/godoc">godoc</a>
now performs sophisticated <a href="/lib/godoc/analysis/help.html">static
analysis</a> of the code it indexes.
The results of analysis are presented in both the source view and the
package documentation view, and include the call graph of each package
and the relationships between
definitions and references,
types and their methods,
interfaces and their implementations,
send and receive operations on channels,
functions and their callers, and
call sites and their callees.
</p>
<h3 id="misc">Miscellany</h3>
<p>
The program <code>misc/benchcmp</code> that compares
performance across benchmarking runs has been rewritten.
Once a shell and awk script in the main repository, it is now a Go program in the <code>go.tools</code> repo.
Documentation is <a href="//godoc.org/golang.org/x/tools/cmd/benchcmp">here</a>.
</p>
<p>
For the few of us that build Go distributions, the tool <code>misc/dist</code> has been
moved and renamed; it now lives in <code>misc/makerelease</code>, still in the main repository.
</p>
<h2 id="performance">Performance</h2>
<p>
The performance of Go binaries for this release has improved in many cases due to changes
in the runtime and garbage collection, plus some changes to libraries.
Significant instances include:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
The runtime handles defers more efficiently, reducing the memory footprint by about two kilobytes
per goroutine that calls defer.
</li>
<li>
The garbage collector has been sped up, using a concurrent sweep algorithm,
better parallelization, and larger pages.
The cumulative effect can be a 50-70% reduction in collector pause time.
</li>
<li>
The race detector (see <a href="/doc/articles/race_detector.html">this guide</a>)
is now about 40% faster.
</li>
<li>
The regular expression package <a href="/pkg/regexp/"><code>regexp</code></a>
is now significantly faster for certain simple expressions due to the implementation of
a second, one-pass execution engine.
The choice of which engine to use is automatic;
the details are hidden from the user.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
Also, the runtime now includes in stack dumps how long a goroutine has been blocked,
which can be useful information when debugging deadlocks or performance issues.
</p>
<h2 id="library">Changes to the standard library</h2>
<h3 id="new_packages">New packages</h3>
<p>
A new package <a href="/pkg/debug/plan9obj/"><code>debug/plan9obj</code></a> was added to the standard library.
It implements access to Plan 9 <a href="http://plan9.bell-labs.com/magic/man2html/6/a.out">a.out</a> object files.
</p>
<h3 id="major_library_changes">Major changes to the library</h3>
<p>
A previous bug in <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a>
made it possible to skip verification in TLS inadvertently.
In Go 1.3, the bug is fixed: one must specify either ServerName or
InsecureSkipVerify, and if ServerName is specified it is enforced.
This may break existing code that incorrectly depended on insecure
behavior.
</p>
<p>
There is an important new type added to the standard library: <a href="/pkg/sync/#Pool"><code>sync.Pool</code></a>.
It provides an efficient mechanism for implementing certain types of caches whose memory
can be reclaimed automatically by the system.
</p>
<p>
The <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package's benchmarking helper,
<a href="/pkg/testing/#B"><code>B</code></a>, now has a
<a href="/pkg/testing/#B.RunParallel"><code>RunParallel</code></a> method
to make it easier to run benchmarks that exercise multiple CPUs.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: The crypto/tls fix may break existing code, but such
code was erroneous and should be updated.
</p>
<h3 id="minor_library_changes">Minor changes to the library</h3>
<p>
The following list summarizes a number of minor changes to the library, mostly additions.
See the relevant package documentation for more information about each change.
</p>
<ul>
<li> In the <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package,
a new <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#DialWithDialer"><code>DialWithDialer</code></a>
function lets one establish a TLS connection using an existing dialer, making it easier
to control dial options such as timeouts.
The package also now reports the TLS version used by the connection in the
<a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState"><code>ConnectionState</code></a>
struct.
</li>
<li> The <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/#CreateCertificate"><code>CreateCertificate</code></a>
function of the <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package
now supports parsing (and elsewhere, serialization) of PKCS #10 certificate
signature requests.
</li>
<li>
The formatted print functions of the <code>fmt</code> package now define <code>%F</code>
as a synonym for <code>%f</code> when printing floating-point values.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int"><code>Int</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Rat"><code>Rat</code></a> types
now implement
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextMarshaler"><code>encoding.TextMarshaler</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextUnmarshaler"><code>encoding.TextUnmarshaler</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The complex power function, <a href="/pkg/math/cmplx/#Pow"><code>Pow</code></a>,
now specifies the behavior when the first argument is zero.
It was undefined before.
The details are in the <a href="/pkg/math/cmplx/#Pow">documentation for the function</a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package now exposes the
properties of a TLS connection used to make a client request in the new
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Response"><code>Response.TLS</code></a> field.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package now
allows setting an optional server error logger
with <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>Server.ErrorLog</code></a>.
The default is still that all errors go to stderr.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package now
supports disabling HTTP keep-alive connections on the server
with <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server.SetKeepAlivesEnabled"><code>Server.SetKeepAlivesEnabled</code></a>.
The default continues to be that the server does keep-alive (reuses
connections for multiple requests) by default.
Only resource-constrained servers or those in the process of graceful
shutdown will want to disable them.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package adds an optional
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport.TLSHandshakeTimeout</code></a>
setting to cap the amount of time HTTP client requests will wait for
TLS handshakes to complete.
It's now also set by default
on <a href="/pkg/net/http#DefaultTransport"><code>DefaultTransport</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#DefaultTransport"><code>DefaultTransport</code></a>,
used by the HTTP client code, now
enables <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keepalive#TCP_keepalive">TCP
keep-alives</a> by default.
Other <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport</code></a>
values with a nil <code>Dial</code> field continue to function the same
as before: no TCP keep-alives are used.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package
now enables <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keepalive#TCP_keepalive">TCP
keep-alives</a> for incoming server requests when
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#ListenAndServe"><code>ListenAndServe</code></a>
or
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#ListenAndServeTLS"><code>ListenAndServeTLS</code></a>
are used.
When a server is started otherwise, TCP keep-alives are not enabled.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package now
provides an
optional <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>Server.ConnState</code></a>
callback to hook various phases of a server connection's lifecycle
(see <a href="/pkg/net/http/#ConnState"><code>ConnState</code></a>).
This can be used to implement rate limiting or graceful shutdown.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's HTTP
client now has an
optional <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Client"><code>Client.Timeout</code></a>
field to specify an end-to-end timeout on requests made using the
client.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request.ParseMultipartForm"><code>Request.ParseMultipartForm</code></a>
method will now return an error if the body's <code>Content-Type</code>
is not <code>mutipart/form-data</code>.
Prior to Go 1.3 it would silently fail and return <code>nil</code>.
Code that relies on the previous behavior should be updated.
</li>
<li> In the <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package,
the <a href="/pkg/net/#Dialer"><code>Dialer</code></a> struct now
has a <code>KeepAlive</code> option to specify a keep-alive period for the connection.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport</code></a>
now closes <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request"><code>Request.Body</code></a>
consistently, even on error.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/os/exec/"><code>os/exec</code></a> package now implements
what the documentation has always said with regard to relative paths for the binary.
In particular, it only calls <a href="/pkg/os/exec/#LookPath"><code>LookPath</code></a>
when the binary's file name contains no path separators.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/reflect/#Value.SetMapIndex"><code>SetMapIndex</code></a>
function in the <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a> package
no longer panics when deleting from a <code>nil</code> map.
</li>
<li>
If the main goroutine calls
<a href="/pkg/runtime/#Goexit"><code>runtime.Goexit</code></a>
and all other goroutines finish execution, the program now always crashes,
reporting a detected deadlock.
Earlier versions of Go handled this situation inconsistently: most instances
were reported as deadlocks, but some trivial cases exited cleanly instead.
</li>
<li>
The runtime/debug package now has a new function
<a href="/pkg/runtime/debug/#WriteHeapDump"><code>debug.WriteHeapDump</code></a>
that writes out a description of the heap.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/strconv/#CanBackquote"><code>CanBackquote</code></a>
function in the <a href="/pkg/strconv/"><code>strconv</code></a> package
now considers the <code>DEL</code> character, <code>U+007F</code>, to be
non-printing.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> package now provides
<a href="/pkg/syscall/#SendmsgN"><code>SendmsgN</code></a>
as an alternate version of
<a href="/pkg/syscall/#Sendmsg"><code>Sendmsg</code></a>
that returns the number of bytes written.
</li>
<li>
On Windows, the <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> package now
supports the cdecl calling convention through the addition of a new function
<a href="/pkg/syscall/#NewCallbackCDecl"><code>NewCallbackCDecl</code></a>
alongside the existing function
<a href="/pkg/syscall/#NewCallback"><code>NewCallback</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package now
diagnoses tests that call <code>panic(nil)</code>, which are almost always erroneous.
Also, tests now write profiles (if invoked with profiling flags) even on failure.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/unicode/"><code>unicode</code></a> package and associated
support throughout the system has been upgraded from
Unicode 6.2.0 to <a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.3.0/">Unicode 6.3.0</a>.
</li>
</ul>

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@@ -0,0 +1,896 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Go 1.4 Release Notes",
"Path": "/doc/go1.4",
"Template": true
}-->
<h2 id="introduction">Introduction to Go 1.4</h2>
<p>
The latest Go release, version 1.4, arrives as scheduled six months after 1.3.
</p>
<p>
It contains only one tiny language change,
in the form of a backwards-compatible simple variant of <code>for</code>-<code>range</code> loop,
and a possibly breaking change to the compiler involving methods on pointers-to-pointers.
</p>
<p>
The release focuses primarily on implementation work, improving the garbage collector
and preparing the ground for a fully concurrent collector to be rolled out in the
next few releases.
Stacks are now contiguous, reallocated when necessary rather than linking on new
"segments";
this release therefore eliminates the notorious "hot stack split" problem.
There are some new tools available including support in the <code>go</code> command
for build-time source code generation.
The release also adds support for ARM processors on Android and Native Client (NaCl)
and for AMD64 on Plan 9.
</p>
<p>
As always, Go 1.4 keeps the <a href="/doc/go1compat.html">promise
of compatibility</a>,
and almost everything
will continue to compile and run without change when moved to 1.4.
</p>
<h2 id="language">Changes to the language</h2>
<h3 id="forrange">For-range loops</h3>
<p>
Up until Go 1.3, <code>for</code>-<code>range</code> loop had two forms
</p>
<pre>
for i, v := range x {
...
}
</pre>
<p>
and
</p>
<pre>
for i := range x {
...
}
</pre>
<p>
If one was not interested in the loop values, only the iteration itself, it was still
necessary to mention a variable (probably the <a href="/ref/spec#Blank_identifier">blank identifier</a>, as in
<code>for</code> <code>_</code> <code>=</code> <code>range</code> <code>x</code>), because
the form
</p>
<pre>
for range x {
...
}
</pre>
<p>
was not syntactically permitted.
</p>
<p>
This situation seemed awkward, so as of Go 1.4 the variable-free form is now legal.
The pattern arises rarely but the code can be cleaner when it does.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: The change is strictly backwards compatible to existing Go
programs, but tools that analyze Go parse trees may need to be modified to accept
this new form as the
<code>Key</code> field of <a href="/pkg/go/ast/#RangeStmt"><code>RangeStmt</code></a>
may now be <code>nil</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="methodonpointertopointer">Method calls on **T</h3>
<p>
Given these declarations,
</p>
<pre>
type T int
func (T) M() {}
var x **T
</pre>
<p>
both <code>gc</code> and <code>gccgo</code> accepted the method call
</p>
<pre>
x.M()
</pre>
<p>
which is a double dereference of the pointer-to-pointer <code>x</code>.
The Go specification allows a single dereference to be inserted automatically,
but not two, so this call is erroneous according to the language definition.
It has therefore been disallowed in Go 1.4, which is a breaking change,
although very few programs will be affected.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Code that depends on the old, erroneous behavior will no longer
compile but is easy to fix by adding an explicit dereference.
</p>
<h2 id="os">Changes to the supported operating systems and architectures</h2>
<h3 id="android">Android</h3>
<p>
Go 1.4 can build binaries for ARM processors running the Android operating system.
It can also build a <code>.so</code> library that can be loaded by an Android application
using the supporting packages in the <a href="https://golang.org/x/mobile">mobile</a> subrepository.
A brief description of the plans for this experimental port are available
<a href="https://golang.org/s/go14android">here</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="naclarm">NaCl on ARM</h3>
<p>
The previous release introduced Native Client (NaCl) support for the 32-bit x86
(<code>GOARCH=386</code>)
and 64-bit x86 using 32-bit pointers (GOARCH=amd64p32).
The 1.4 release adds NaCl support for ARM (GOARCH=arm).
</p>
<h3 id="plan9amd64">Plan9 on AMD64</h3>
<p>
This release adds support for the Plan 9 operating system on AMD64 processors,
provided the kernel supports the <code>nsec</code> system call and uses 4K pages.
</p>
<h2 id="compatibility">Changes to the compatibility guidelines</h2>
<p>
The <a href="/pkg/unsafe/"><code>unsafe</code></a> package allows one
to defeat Go's type system by exploiting internal details of the implementation
or machine representation of data.
It was never explicitly specified what use of <code>unsafe</code> meant
with respect to compatibility as specified in the
<a href="go1compat.html">Go compatibility guidelines</a>.
The answer, of course, is that we can make no promise of compatibility
for code that does unsafe things.
</p>
<p>
We have clarified this situation in the documentation included in the release.
The <a href="go1compat.html">Go compatibility guidelines</a> and the
docs for the <a href="/pkg/unsafe/"><code>unsafe</code></a> package
are now explicit that unsafe code is not guaranteed to remain compatible.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Nothing technical has changed; this is just a clarification
of the documentation.
</p>
<h2 id="impl">Changes to the implementations and tools</h2>
<h3 id="runtime">Changes to the runtime</h3>
<p>
Prior to Go 1.4, the runtime (garbage collector, concurrency support, interface management,
maps, slices, strings, ...) was mostly written in C, with some assembler support.
In 1.4, much of the code has been translated to Go so that the garbage collector can scan
the stacks of programs in the runtime and get accurate information about what variables
are active.
This change was large but should have no semantic effect on programs.
</p>
<p>
This rewrite allows the garbage collector in 1.4 to be fully precise,
meaning that it is aware of the location of all active pointers in the program.
This means the heap will be smaller as there will be no false positives keeping non-pointers alive.
Other related changes also reduce the heap size, which is smaller by 10%-30% overall
relative to the previous release.
</p>
<p>
A consequence is that stacks are no longer segmented, eliminating the "hot split" problem.
When a stack limit is reached, a new, larger stack is allocated, all active frames for
the goroutine are copied there, and any pointers into the stack are updated.
Performance can be noticeably better in some cases and is always more predictable.
Details are available in <a href="https://golang.org/s/contigstacks">the design document</a>.
</p>
<p>
The use of contiguous stacks means that stacks can start smaller without triggering performance issues,
so the default starting size for a goroutine's stack in 1.4 has been reduced from 8192 bytes to 2048 bytes.
</p>
<p>
As preparation for the concurrent garbage collector scheduled for the 1.5 release,
writes to pointer values in the heap are now done by a function call,
called a write barrier, rather than directly from the function updating the value.
In this next release, this will permit the garbage collector to mediate writes to the heap while it is running.
This change has no semantic effect on programs in 1.4, but was
included in the release to test the compiler and the resulting performance.
</p>
<p>
The implementation of interface values has been modified.
In earlier releases, the interface contained a word that was either a pointer or a one-word
scalar value, depending on the type of the concrete object stored.
This implementation was problematical for the garbage collector,
so as of 1.4 interface values always hold a pointer.
In running programs, most interface values were pointers anyway,
so the effect is minimal, but programs that store integers (for example) in
interfaces will see more allocations.
</p>
<p>
As of Go 1.3, the runtime crashes if it finds a memory word that should contain
a valid pointer but instead contains an obviously invalid pointer (for example, the value 3).
Programs that store integers in pointer values may run afoul of this check and crash.
In Go 1.4, setting the <a href="/pkg/runtime/"><code>GODEBUG</code></a> variable
<code>invalidptr=0</code> disables
the crash as a workaround, but we cannot guarantee that future releases will be
able to avoid the crash; the correct fix is to rewrite code not to alias integers and pointers.
</p>
<h3 id="asm">Assembly</h3>
<p>
The language accepted by the assemblers <code>cmd/5a</code>, <code>cmd/6a</code>
and <code>cmd/8a</code> has had several changes,
mostly to make it easier to deliver type information to the runtime.
</p>
<p>
First, the <code>textflag.h</code> file that defines flags for <code>TEXT</code> directives
has been copied from the linker source directory to a standard location so it can be
included with the simple directive
</p>
<pre>
#include "textflag.h"
</pre>
<p>
The more important changes are in how assembler source can define the necessary
type information.
For most programs it will suffice to move data
definitions (<code>DATA</code> and <code>GLOBL</code> directives)
out of assembly into Go files
and to write a Go declaration for each assembly function.
The <a href="/doc/asm#runtime">assembly document</a> describes what to do.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
Assembly files that include <code>textflag.h</code> from its old
location will still work, but should be updated.
For the type information, most assembly routines will need no change,
but all should be examined.
Assembly source files that define data,
functions with non-empty stack frames, or functions that return pointers
need particular attention.
A description of the necessary (but simple) changes
is in the <a href="/doc/asm#runtime">assembly document</a>.
</p>
<p>
More information about these changes is in the <a href="/doc/asm">assembly document</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="gccgo">Status of gccgo</h3>
<p>
The release schedules for the GCC and Go projects do not coincide.
GCC release 4.9 contains the Go 1.2 version of gccgo.
The next release, GCC 5, will likely have the Go 1.4 version of gccgo.
</p>
<h3 id="internalpackages">Internal packages</h3>
<p>
Go's package system makes it easy to structure programs into components with clean boundaries,
but there are only two forms of access: local (unexported) and global (exported).
Sometimes one wishes to have components that are not exported,
for instance to avoid acquiring clients of interfaces to code that is part of a public repository
but not intended for use outside the program to which it belongs.
</p>
<p>
The Go language does not have the power to enforce this distinction, but as of Go 1.4 the
<a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go</code></a> command introduces
a mechanism to define "internal" packages that may not be imported by packages outside
the source subtree in which they reside.
</p>
<p>
To create such a package, place it in a directory named <code>internal</code> or in a subdirectory of a directory
named internal.
When the <code>go</code> command sees an import of a package with <code>internal</code> in its path,
it verifies that the package doing the import
is within the tree rooted at the parent of the <code>internal</code> directory.
For example, a package <code>.../a/b/c/internal/d/e/f</code>
can be imported only by code in the directory tree rooted at <code>.../a/b/c</code>.
It cannot be imported by code in <code>.../a/b/g</code> or in any other repository.
</p>
<p>
For Go 1.4, the internal package mechanism is enforced for the main Go repository;
from 1.5 and onward it will be enforced for any repository.
</p>
<p>
Full details of the mechanism are in
<a href="https://golang.org/s/go14internal">the design document</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="canonicalimports">Canonical import paths</h3>
<p>
Code often lives in repositories hosted by public services such as <code>github.com</code>,
meaning that the import paths for packages begin with the name of the hosting service,
<code>github.com/rsc/pdf</code> for example.
One can use
<a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Remote_import_paths">an existing mechanism</a>
to provide a "custom" or "vanity" import path such as
<code>rsc.io/pdf</code>, but
that creates two valid import paths for the package.
That is a problem: one may inadvertently import the package through the two
distinct paths in a single program, which is wasteful;
miss an update to a package because the path being used is not recognized to be
out of date;
or break clients using the old path by moving the package to a different hosting service.
</p>
<p>
Go 1.4 introduces an annotation for package clauses in Go source that identify a canonical
import path for the package.
If an import is attempted using a path that is not canonical,
the <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go</code></a> command
will refuse to compile the importing package.
</p>
<p>
The syntax is simple: put an identifying comment on the package line.
For our example, the package clause would read:
</p>
<pre>
package pdf // import "rsc.io/pdf"
</pre>
<p>
With this in place,
the <code>go</code> command will
refuse to compile a package that imports <code>github.com/rsc/pdf</code>,
ensuring that the code can be moved without breaking users.
</p>
<p>
The check is at build time, not download time, so if <code>go</code> <code>get</code>
fails because of this check, the mis-imported package has been copied to the local machine
and should be removed manually.
</p>
<p>
To complement this new feature, a check has been added at update time to verify
that the local package's remote repository matches that of its custom import.
The <code>go</code> <code>get</code> <code>-u</code> command will fail to
update a package if its remote repository has changed since it was first
downloaded.
The new <code>-f</code> flag overrides this check.
</p>
<p>
Further information is in
<a href="https://golang.org/s/go14customimport">the design document</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="subrepo">Import paths for the subrepositories</h3>
<p>
The Go project subrepositories (<code>code.google.com/p/go.tools</code> and so on)
are now available under custom import paths replacing <code>code.google.com/p/go.</code> with <code>golang.org/x/</code>,
as in <code>golang.org/x/tools</code>.
We will add canonical import comments to the code around June 1, 2015,
at which point Go 1.4 and later will stop accepting the old <code>code.google.com</code> paths.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: All code that imports from subrepositories should change
to use the new <code>golang.org</code> paths.
Go 1.0 and later can resolve and import the new paths, so updating will not break
compatibility with older releases.
Code that has not updated will stop compiling with Go 1.4 around June 1, 2015.
</p>
<h3 id="gogenerate">The go generate subcommand</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go</code></a> command has a new subcommand,
<a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Generate_Go_files_by_processing_source"><code>go generate</code></a>,
to automate the running of tools to generate source code before compilation.
For example, it can be used to run the <a href="/cmd/yacc"><code>yacc</code></a>
compiler-compiler on a <code>.y</code> file to produce the Go source file implementing the grammar,
or to automate the generation of <code>String</code> methods for typed constants using the new
<a href="http://godoc.org/golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer">stringer</a>
tool in the <code>golang.org/x/tools</code> subrepository.
</p>
<p>
For more information, see the
<a href="https://golang.org/s/go1.4-generate">design document</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="filenames">Change to file name handling</h3>
<p>
Build constraints, also known as build tags, control compilation by including or excluding files
(see the documentation <a href="/pkg/go/build/"><code>/go/build</code></a>).
Compilation can also be controlled by the name of the file itself by "tagging" the file with
a suffix (before the <code>.go</code> or <code>.s</code> extension) with an underscore
and the name of the architecture or operating system.
For instance, the file <code>gopher_arm.go</code> will only be compiled if the target
processor is an ARM.
</p>
<p>
Before Go 1.4, a file called just <code>arm.go</code> was similarly tagged, but this behavior
can break sources when new architectures are added, causing files to suddenly become tagged.
In 1.4, therefore, a file will be tagged in this manner only if the tag (architecture or operating
system name) is preceded by an underscore.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Packages that depend on the old behavior will no longer compile correctly.
Files with names like <code>windows.go</code> or <code>amd64.go</code> should either
have explicit build tags added to the source or be renamed to something like
<code>os_windows.go</code> or <code>support_amd64.go</code>.
</p>
<h3 id="gocmd">Other changes to the go command</h3>
<p>
There were a number of minor changes to the
<a href="/cmd/go/"><code>cmd/go</code></a>
command worth noting.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
Unless <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> is being used to build the package,
the <code>go</code> command now refuses to compile C source files,
since the relevant C compilers
(<a href="/cmd/6c/"><code>6c</code></a> etc.)
are intended to be removed from the installation in some future release.
(They are used today only to build part of the runtime.)
It is difficult to use them correctly in any case, so any extant uses are likely incorrect,
so we have disabled them.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Test_packages"><code>go</code> <code>test</code></a>
subcommand has a new flag, <code>-o</code>, to set the name of the resulting binary,
corresponding to the same flag in other subcommands.
The non-functional <code>-file</code> flag has been removed.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Test_packages"><code>go</code> <code>test</code></a>
subcommand will compile and link all <code>*_test.go</code> files in the package,
even when there are no <code>Test</code> functions in them.
It previously ignored such files.
</li>
<li>
The behavior of the
<a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Test_packages"><code>go</code> <code>build</code></a>
subcommand's
<code>-a</code> flag has been changed for non-development installations.
For installations running a released distribution, the <code>-a</code> flag will no longer
rebuild the standard library and commands, to avoid overwriting the installation's files.
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="pkg">Changes to package source layout</h3>
<p>
In the main Go source repository, the source code for the packages was kept in
the directory <code>src/pkg</code>, which made sense but differed from
other repositories, including the Go subrepositories.
In Go 1.4, the<code> pkg</code> level of the source tree is now gone, so for example
the <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package's source, once kept in
directory <code>src/pkg/fmt</code>, now lives one level higher in <code>src/fmt</code>.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Tools like <code>godoc</code> that discover source code
need to know about the new location. All tools and services maintained by the Go team
have been updated.
</p>
<h3 id="swig">SWIG</h3>
<p>
Due to runtime changes in this release, Go 1.4 requires SWIG 3.0.3.
</p>
<h3 id="misc">Miscellany</h3>
<p>
The standard repository's top-level <code>misc</code> directory used to contain
Go support for editors and IDEs: plugins, initialization scripts and so on.
Maintaining these was becoming time-consuming
and needed external help because many of the editors listed were not used by
members of the core team.
It also required us to make decisions about which plugin was best for a given
editor, even for editors we do not use.
</p>
<p>
The Go community at large is much better suited to managing this information.
In Go 1.4, therefore, this support has been removed from the repository.
Instead, there is a curated, informative list of what's available on
a <a href="//golang.org/wiki/IDEsAndTextEditorPlugins">wiki page</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="performance">Performance</h2>
<p>
Most programs will run about the same speed or slightly faster in 1.4 than in 1.3;
some will be slightly slower.
There are many changes, making it hard to be precise about what to expect.
</p>
<p>
As mentioned above, much of the runtime was translated to Go from C,
which led to some reduction in heap sizes.
It also improved performance slightly because the Go compiler is better
at optimization, due to things like inlining, than the C compiler used to build
the runtime.
</p>
<p>
The garbage collector was sped up, leading to measurable improvements for
garbage-heavy programs.
On the other hand, the new write barriers slow things down again, typically
by about the same amount but, depending on their behavior, some programs
may be somewhat slower or faster.
</p>
<p>
Library changes that affect performance are documented below.
</p>
<h2 id="library">Changes to the standard library</h2>
<h3 id="new_packages">New packages</h3>
<p>
There are no new packages in this release.
</p>
<h3 id="major_library_changes">Major changes to the library</h3>
<h4 id="scanner">bufio.Scanner</h4>
<p>
The <a href="/pkg/bufio/#Scanner"><code>Scanner</code></a> type in the
<a href="/pkg/bufio/"><code>bufio</code></a> package
has had a bug fixed that may require changes to custom
<a href="/pkg/bufio/#SplitFunc"><code>split functions</code></a>.
The bug made it impossible to generate an empty token at EOF; the fix
changes the end conditions seen by the split function.
Previously, scanning stopped at EOF if there was no more data.
As of 1.4, the split function will be called once at EOF after input is exhausted,
so the split function can generate a final empty token
as the documentation already promised.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Custom split functions may need to be modified to
handle empty tokens at EOF as desired.
</p>
<h4 id="syscall">syscall</h4>
<p>
The <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> package is now frozen except
for changes needed to maintain the core repository.
In particular, it will no longer be extended to support new or different system calls
that are not used by the core.
The reasons are described at length in <a href="https://golang.org/s/go1.4-syscall">a
separate document</a>.
</p>
<p>
A new subrepository, <a href="https://golang.org/x/sys">golang.org/x/sys</a>,
has been created to serve as the location for new developments to support system
calls on all kernels.
It has a nicer structure, with three packages that each hold the implementation of
system calls for one of
<a href="http://godoc.org/golang.org/x/sys/unix">Unix</a>,
<a href="http://godoc.org/golang.org/x/sys/windows">Windows</a> and
<a href="http://godoc.org/golang.org/x/sys/plan9">Plan 9</a>.
These packages will be curated more generously, accepting all reasonable changes
that reflect kernel interfaces in those operating systems.
See the documentation and the article mentioned above for more information.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>: Existing programs are not affected as the <code>syscall</code>
package is largely unchanged from the 1.3 release.
Future development that requires system calls not in the <code>syscall</code> package
should build on <code>golang.org/x/sys</code> instead.
</p>
<h3 id="minor_library_changes">Minor changes to the library</h3>
<p>
The following list summarizes a number of minor changes to the library, mostly additions.
See the relevant package documentation for more information about each change.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/"><code>archive/zip</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a> now supports a
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer.Flush"><code>Flush</code></a> method.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/"><code>compress/flate</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/"><code>compress/gzip</code></a>,
and <a href="/pkg/compress/zlib/"><code>compress/zlib</code></a>
packages now support a <code>Reset</code> method
for the decompressors, allowing them to reuse buffers and improve performance.
The <a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/"><code>compress/gzip</code></a> package also has a
<a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/#Reader.Multistream"><code>Multistream</code></a> method to control support
for multistream files.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/"><code>crypto</code></a> package now has a
<a href="/pkg/crypto/#Signer"><code>Signer</code></a> interface, implemented by the
<code>PrivateKey</code> types in
<a href="/pkg/crypto/ecdsa"><code>crypto/ecdsa</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/crypto/rsa"><code>crypto/rsa</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package
now supports ALPN as defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7301">RFC 7301</a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package
now supports programmatic selection of server certificates
through the new <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config.CertificateForName"><code>CertificateForName</code></a> function
of the <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config"><code>Config</code></a> struct.
</li>
<li>
Also in the crypto/tls package, the server now supports
<a href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-downgrade-scsv-00">TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV</a>
to help clients detect fallback attacks.
(The Go client does not support fallback at all, so it is not vulnerable to
those attacks.)
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/database/sql/"><code>database/sql</code></a> package can now list all registered
<a href="/pkg/database/sql/#Drivers"><code>Drivers</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/debug/dwarf/"><code>debug/dwarf</code></a> package now supports
<a href="/pkg/debug/dwarf/#UnspecifiedType"><code>UnspecifiedType</code></a>s.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/"><code>encoding/asn1</code></a> package,
optional elements with a default value will now only be omitted if they have that value.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/csv/"><code>encoding/csv</code></a> package no longer
quotes empty strings but does quote the end-of-data marker <code>\.</code> (backslash dot).
This is permitted by the definition of CSV and allows it to work better with Postgres.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/gob/"><code>encoding/gob</code></a> package has been rewritten to eliminate
the use of unsafe operations, allowing it to be used in environments that do not permit use of the
<a href="/pkg/unsafe/"><code>unsafe</code></a> package.
For typical uses it will be 10-30% slower, but the delta is dependent on the type of the data and
in some cases, especially involving arrays, it can be faster.
There is no functional change.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a> can now report its input offset.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package,
formatting of pointers to maps has changed to be consistent with that of pointers
to structs, arrays, and so on.
For instance, <code>&amp;map[string]int{"one":</code> <code>1}</code> now prints by default as
<code>&amp;map[one:</code> <code>1]</code> rather than as a hexadecimal pointer value.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/image/"><code>image</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/image/#Image"><code>Image</code></a>
implementations like
<a href="/pkg/image/#RGBA"><code>RGBA</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/image/#Gray"><code>Gray</code></a> have specialized
<a href="/pkg/image/#RGBA.RGBAAt"><code>RGBAAt</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/image/#Gray.GrayAt"><code>GrayAt</code></a> methods alongside the general
<a href="/pkg/image/#Image.At"><code>At</code></a> method.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/image/png/"><code>image/png</code></a> package now has an
<a href="/pkg/image/png/#Encoder"><code>Encoder</code></a>
type to control the compression level used for encoding.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/math/"><code>math</code></a> package now has a
<a href="/pkg/math/#Nextafter32"><code>Nextafter32</code><a/> function.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request"><code>Request</code></a> type
has a new <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request.BasicAuth"><code>BasicAuth</code></a> method
that returns the username and password from authenticated requests using the
HTTP Basic Authentication
Scheme.
</li>
<li>The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request"><code>Transport</code></a> type
has a new <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport.DialTLS"><code>DialTLS</code></a> hook
that allows customizing the behavior of outbound TLS connections.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/httputil/"><code>net/http/httputil</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/httputil/#ReverseProxy"><code>ReverseProxy</code></a> type
has a new field,
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#ReverseProxy.ErrorLog"><code>ErrorLog</code></a>, that
provides user control of logging.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/os/"><code>os</code></a> package
now implements symbolic links on the Windows operating system
through the <a href="/pkg/os/#Symlink"><code>Symlink</code></a> function.
Other operating systems already have this functionality.
There is also a new <a href="/pkg/os/#Unsetenv"><code>Unsetenv</code></a> function.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/reflect/#Type"><code>Type</code></a> interface
has a new method, <a href="/pkg/reflect/#type.Comparable"><code>Comparable</code></a>,
that reports whether the type implements general comparisons.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a> package, the
<a href="/pkg/reflect/#Value"><code>Value</code></a> interface is now three instead of four words
because of changes to the implementation of interfaces in the runtime.
This saves memory but has no semantic effect.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/runtime/"><code>runtime</code></a> package
now implements monotonic clocks on Windows,
as it already did for the other systems.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/runtime/"><code>runtime</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/runtime/#MemStats.Mallocs"><code>Mallocs</code></a> counter
now counts very small allocations that were missed in Go 1.3.
This may break tests using <a href="/pkg/runtime/#ReadMemStats"><code>ReadMemStats</code></a>
or <a href="/pkg/testing/#AllocsPerRun"><code>AllocsPerRun</code></a>
due to the more accurate answer.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/runtime/"><code>runtime</code></a> package,
an array <a href="/pkg/runtime/#MemStats.PauseEnd"><code>PauseEnd</code></a>
has been added to the
<a href="/pkg/runtime/#MemStats"><code>MemStats</code></a>
and <a href="/pkg/runtime/#GCStats"><code>GCStats</code></a> structs.
This array is a circular buffer of times when garbage collection pauses ended.
The corresponding pause durations are already recorded in
<a href="/pkg/runtime/#MemStats.PauseNs"><code>PauseNs</code></a>
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/runtime/race/"><code>runtime/race</code></a> package
now supports FreeBSD, which means the
<a href="/pkg/cmd/go/"><code>go</code></a> command's <code>-race</code>
flag now works on FreeBSD.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/"><code>sync/atomic</code></a> package
has a new type, <a href="/pkg/sync/atomic/#Value"><code>Value</code></a>.
<code>Value</code> provides an efficient mechanism for atomic loads and
stores of values of arbitrary type.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> package's
implementation on Linux, the
<a href="/pkg/syscall/#Setuid"><code>Setuid</code></a>
and <a href="/pkg/syscall/#Setgid"><code>Setgid</code></a> have been disabled
because those system calls operate on the calling thread, not the whole process, which is
different from other platforms and not the expected result.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package
has a new facility to provide more control over running a set of tests.
If the test code contains a function
<pre>
func TestMain(m *<a href="/pkg/testing/#M"><code>testing.M</code></a>)
</pre>
that function will be called instead of running the tests directly.
The <code>M</code> struct contains methods to access and run the tests.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package,
a new <a href="/pkg/testing/#Coverage"><code>Coverage</code></a>
function reports the current test coverage fraction,
enabling individual tests to report how much they are contributing to the
overall coverage.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/text/scanner/"><code>text/scanner</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/text/scanner/#Scanner"><code>Scanner</code></a> type
has a new function,
<a href="/pkg/text/scanner/#Scanner.IsIdentRune"><code>IsIdentRune</code></a>,
allowing one to control the definition of an identifier when scanning.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/text/template/"><code>text/template</code></a> package's boolean
functions <code>eq</code>, <code>lt</code>, and so on have been generalized to allow comparison
of signed and unsigned integers, simplifying their use in practice.
(Previously one could only compare values of the same signedness.)
All negative values compare less than all unsigned values.
</li>
<li>
The <code>time</code> package now uses the standard symbol for the micro prefix,
the micro symbol (U+00B5 'µ'), to print microsecond durations.
<a href="/pkg/time/#ParseDuration"><code>ParseDuration</code></a> still accepts <code>us</code>
but the package no longer prints microseconds as <code>us</code>.
<br>
<em>Updating</em>: Code that depends on the output format of durations
but does not use ParseDuration will need to be updated.
</li>
</ul>

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<!--{
"Title": "Go 1.6 Release Notes",
"Path": "/doc/go1.6",
"Template": true
}-->
<!--
Edit .,s;^PKG:([a-z][A-Za-z0-9_/]+);<a href="/pkg/\1/"><code>\1</code></a>;g
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<style>
ul li { margin: 0.5em 0; }
</style>
<h2 id="introduction">Introduction to Go 1.6</h2>
<p>
The latest Go release, version 1.6, arrives six months after 1.5.
Most of its changes are in the implementation of the language, runtime, and libraries.
There are no changes to the language specification.
As always, the release maintains the Go 1 <a href="/doc/go1compat.html">promise of compatibility</a>.
We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before.
</p>
<p>
The release adds new ports to <a href="#ports">Linux on 64-bit MIPS and Android on 32-bit x86</a>;
defined and enforced <a href="#cgo">rules for sharing Go pointers with C</a>;
transparent, automatic <a href="#http2">support for HTTP/2</a>;
and a new mechanism for <a href="#template">template reuse</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="language">Changes to the language</h2>
<p>
There are no language changes in this release.
</p>
<h2 id="ports">Ports</h2>
<p>
Go 1.6 adds experimental ports to
Linux on 64-bit MIPS (<code>linux/mips64</code> and <code>linux/mips64le</code>).
These ports support <code>cgo</code> but only with internal linking.
</p>
<p>
Go 1.6 also adds an experimental port to Android on 32-bit x86 (<code>android/386</code>).
</p>
<p>
On FreeBSD, Go 1.6 defaults to using <code>clang</code>, not <code>gcc</code>, as the external C compiler.
</p>
<p>
On Linux on little-endian 64-bit PowerPC (<code>linux/ppc64le</code>),
Go 1.6 now supports <code>cgo</code> with external linking and
is roughly feature complete.
</p>
<p>
On NaCl, Go 1.5 required SDK version pepper-41.
Go 1.6 adds support for later SDK versions.
</p>
<p>
On 32-bit x86 systems using the <code>-dynlink</code> or <code>-shared</code> compilation modes,
the register CX is now overwritten by certain memory references and should
be avoided in hand-written assembly.
See the <a href="/doc/asm#x86">assembly documentation</a> for details.
</p>
<h2 id="tools">Tools</h2>
<h3 id="cgo">Cgo</h3>
<p>
There is one major change to <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a>, along with one minor change.
</p>
<p>
The major change is the definition of rules for sharing Go pointers with C code,
to ensure that such C code can coexist with Go's garbage collector.
Briefly, Go and C may share memory allocated by Go
when a pointer to that memory is passed to C as part of a <code>cgo</code> call,
provided that the memory itself contains no pointers to Go-allocated memory,
and provided that C does not retain the pointer after the call returns.
These rules are checked by the runtime during program execution:
if the runtime detects a violation, it prints a diagnosis and crashes the program.
The checks can be disabled by setting the environment variable
<code>GODEBUG=cgocheck=0</code>, but note that the vast majority of
code identified by the checks is subtly incompatible with garbage collection
in one way or another.
Disabling the checks will typically only lead to more mysterious failure modes.
Fixing the code in question should be strongly preferred
over turning off the checks.
See the <a href="/cmd/cgo/#hdr-Passing_pointers"><code>cgo</code> documentation</a> for more details.
</p>
<p>
The minor change is
the addition of explicit <code>C.complexfloat</code> and <code>C.complexdouble</code> types,
separate from Go's <code>complex64</code> and <code>complex128</code>.
Matching the other numeric types, C's complex types and Go's complex type are
no longer interchangeable.
</p>
<h3 id="compiler">Compiler Toolchain</h3>
<p>
The compiler toolchain is mostly unchanged.
Internally, the most significant change is that the parser is now hand-written
instead of generated from <a href="/cmd/yacc/">yacc</a>.
</p>
<p>
The compiler, linker, and <code>go</code> command have a new flag <code>-msan</code>,
analogous to <code>-race</code> and only available on linux/amd64,
that enables interoperation with the <a href="http://clang.llvm.org/docs/MemorySanitizer.html">Clang MemorySanitizer</a>.
Such interoperation is useful mainly for testing a program containing suspect C or C++ code.
</p>
<p>
The linker has a new option <code>-libgcc</code> to set the expected location
of the C compiler support library when linking <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> code.
The option is only consulted when using <code>-linkmode=internal</code>,
and it may be set to <code>none</code> to disable the use of a support library.
</p>
<p>
The implementation of <a href="/doc/go1.5#link">build modes started in Go 1.5</a> has been expanded to more systems.
This release adds support for the <code>c-shared</code> mode on <code>android/386</code>, <code>android/amd64</code>,
<code>android/arm64</code>, <code>linux/386</code>, and <code>linux/arm64</code>;
for the <code>shared</code> mode on <code>linux/386</code>, <code>linux/arm</code>, <code>linux/amd64</code>, and <code>linux/ppc64le</code>;
and for the new <code>pie</code> mode (generating position-independent executables) on
<code>android/386</code>, <code>android/amd64</code>, <code>android/arm</code>, <code>android/arm64</code>, <code>linux/386</code>,
<code>linux/amd64</code>, <code>linux/arm</code>, <code>linux/arm64</code>, and <code>linux/ppc64le</code>.
See the <a href="https://golang.org/s/execmodes">design document</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
As a reminder, the linker's <code>-X</code> flag changed in Go 1.5.
In Go 1.4 and earlier, it took two arguments, as in
</p>
<pre>
-X importpath.name value
</pre>
<p>
Go 1.5 added an alternative syntax using a single argument
that is itself a <code>name=value</code> pair:
</p>
<pre>
-X importpath.name=value
</pre>
<p>
In Go 1.5 the old syntax was still accepted, after printing a warning
suggesting use of the new syntax instead.
Go 1.6 continues to accept the old syntax and print the warning.
Go 1.7 will remove support for the old syntax.
</p>
<h3 id="gccgo">Gccgo</h3>
<p>
The release schedules for the GCC and Go projects do not coincide.
GCC release 5 contains the Go 1.4 version of gccgo.
The next release, GCC 6, will have the Go 1.6.1 version of gccgo.
</p>
<h3 id="go_command">Go command</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/go"><code>go</code></a> command's basic operation
is unchanged, but there are a number of changes worth noting.
</p>
<p>
Go 1.5 introduced experimental support for vendoring,
enabled by setting the <code>GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT</code> environment variable to <code>1</code>.
Go 1.6 keeps the vendoring support, no longer considered experimental,
and enables it by default.
It can be disabled explicitly by setting
the <code>GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT</code> environment variable to <code>0</code>.
Go 1.7 will remove support for the environment variable.
</p>
<p>
The most likely problem caused by enabling vendoring by default happens
in source trees containing an existing directory named <code>vendor</code> that
does not expect to be interpreted according to new vendoring semantics.
In this case, the simplest fix is to rename the directory to anything other
than <code>vendor</code> and update any affected import paths.
</p>
<p>
For details about vendoring,
see the documentation for the <a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Vendor_Directories"><code>go</code> command</a>
and the <a href="https://golang.org/s/go15vendor">design document</a>.
</p>
<p>
There is a new build flag, <code>-msan</code>,
that compiles Go with support for the LLVM memory sanitizer.
This is intended mainly for use when linking against C or C++ code
that is being checked with the memory sanitizer.
</p>
<h3 id="doc_command">Go doc command</h3>
<p>
Go 1.5 introduced the
<a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Show_documentation_for_package_or_symbol"><code>go doc</code></a> command,
which allows references to packages using only the package name, as in
<code>go</code> <code>doc</code> <code>http</code>.
In the event of ambiguity, the Go 1.5 behavior was to use the package
with the lexicographically earliest import path.
In Go 1.6, ambiguity is resolved by preferring import paths with
fewer elements, breaking ties using lexicographic comparison.
An important effect of this change is that original copies of packages
are now preferred over vendored copies.
Successful searches also tend to run faster.
</p>
<h3 id="vet_command">Go vet command</h3>
<p>
The <a href="/cmd/vet"><code>go vet</code></a> command now diagnoses
passing function or method values as arguments to <code>Printf</code>,
such as when passing <code>f</code> where <code>f()</code> was intended.
</p>
<h2 id="performance">Performance</h2>
<p>
As always, the changes are so general and varied that precise statements
about performance are difficult to make.
Some programs may run faster, some slower.
On average the programs in the Go 1 benchmark suite run a few percent faster in Go 1.6
than they did in Go 1.5.
The garbage collector's pauses are even lower than in Go 1.5,
especially for programs using
a large amount of memory.
</p>
<p>
There have been significant optimizations bringing more than 10% improvements
to implementations of the
<a href="/pkg/compress/bzip2/"><code>compress/bzip2</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/"><code>compress/gzip</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/crypto/aes/"><code>crypto/aes</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/crypto/elliptic/"><code>crypto/elliptic</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/crypto/ecdsa/"><code>crypto/ecdsa</code></a>, and
<a href="/pkg/sort/"><code>sort</code></a> packages.
</p>
<h2 id="library">Core library</h2>
<h3 id="http2">HTTP/2</h3>
<p>
Go 1.6 adds transparent support in the
<a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package
for the new <a href="https://http2.github.io/">HTTP/2 protocol</a>.
Go clients and servers will automatically use HTTP/2 as appropriate when using HTTPS.
There is no exported API specific to details of the HTTP/2 protocol handling,
just as there is no exported API specific to HTTP/1.1.
</p>
<p>
Programs that must disable HTTP/2 can do so by setting
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport.TLSNextProto</code></a> (for clients)
or
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>Server.TLSNextProto</code></a> (for servers)
to a non-nil, empty map.
</p>
<p>
Programs that must adjust HTTP/2 protocol-specific details can import and use
<a href="https://golang.org/x/net/http2"><code>golang.org/x/net/http2</code></a>,
in particular its
<a href="https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/net/http2/#ConfigureServer">ConfigureServer</a>
and
<a href="https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/net/http2/#ConfigureTransport">ConfigureTransport</a>
functions.
</p>
<h3 id="runtime">Runtime</h3>
<p>
The runtime has added lightweight, best-effort detection of concurrent misuse of maps.
As always, if one goroutine is writing to a map, no other goroutine should be
reading or writing the map concurrently.
If the runtime detects this condition, it prints a diagnosis and crashes the program.
The best way to find out more about the problem is to run the program
under the
<a href="https://blog.golang.org/race-detector">race detector</a>,
which will more reliably identify the race
and give more detail.
</p>
<p>
For program-ending panics, the runtime now by default
prints only the stack of the running goroutine,
not all existing goroutines.
Usually only the current goroutine is relevant to a panic,
so omitting the others significantly reduces irrelevant output
in a crash message.
To see the stacks from all goroutines in crash messages, set the environment variable
<code>GOTRACEBACK</code> to <code>all</code>
or call
<a href="/pkg/runtime/debug/#SetTraceback"><code>debug.SetTraceback</code></a>
before the crash, and rerun the program.
See the <a href="/pkg/runtime/#hdr-Environment_Variables">runtime documentation</a> for details.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
Uncaught panics intended to dump the state of the entire program,
such as when a timeout is detected or when explicitly handling a received signal,
should now call <code>debug.SetTraceback("all")</code> before panicking.
Searching for uses of
<a href="/pkg/os/signal/#Notify"><code>signal.Notify</code></a> may help identify such code.
</p>
<p>
On Windows, Go programs in Go 1.5 and earlier forced
the global Windows timer resolution to 1ms at startup
by calling <code>timeBeginPeriod(1)</code>.
Go no longer needs this for good scheduler performance,
and changing the global timer resolution caused problems on some systems,
so the call has been removed.
</p>
<p>
When using <code>-buildmode=c-archive</code> or
<code>-buildmode=c-shared</code> to build an archive or a shared
library, the handling of signals has changed.
In Go 1.5 the archive or shared library would install a signal handler
for most signals.
In Go 1.6 it will only install a signal handler for the
synchronous signals needed to handle run-time panics in Go code:
SIGBUS, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV.
See the <a href="/pkg/os/signal">os/signal</a> package for more
details.
</p>
<h3 id="reflect">Reflect</h3>
<p>
The
<a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a> package has
<a href="https://golang.org/issue/12367">resolved a long-standing incompatibility</a>
between the gc and gccgo toolchains
regarding embedded unexported struct types containing exported fields.
Code that walks data structures using reflection, especially to implement
serialization in the spirit
of the
<a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> packages,
may need to be updated.
</p>
<p>
The problem arises when using reflection to walk through
an embedded unexported struct-typed field
into an exported field of that struct.
In this case, <code>reflect</code> had incorrectly reported
the embedded field as exported, by returning an empty <code>Field.PkgPath</code>.
Now it correctly reports the field as unexported
but ignores that fact when evaluating access to exported fields
contained within the struct.
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
Typically, code that previously walked over structs and used
</p>
<pre>
f.PkgPath != ""
</pre>
<p>
to exclude inaccessible fields
should now use
</p>
<pre>
f.PkgPath != "" &amp;&amp; !f.Anonymous
</pre>
<p>
For example, see the changes to the implementations of
<a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/#/c/14011/2/src/encoding/json/encode.go"><code>encoding/json</code></a> and
<a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/#/c/14012/2/src/encoding/xml/typeinfo.go"><code>encoding/xml</code></a>.
</p>
<h3 id="sort">Sorting</h3>
<p>
In the
<a href="/pkg/sort/"><code>sort</code></a>
package,
the implementation of
<a href="/pkg/sort/#Sort"><code>Sort</code></a>
has been rewritten to make about 10% fewer calls to the
<a href="/pkg/sort/#Interface"><code>Interface</code></a>'s
<code>Less</code> and <code>Swap</code>
methods, with a corresponding overall time savings.
The new algorithm does choose a different ordering than before
for values that compare equal (those pairs for which <code>Less(i,</code> <code>j)</code> and <code>Less(j,</code> <code>i)</code> are false).
</p>
<p>
<em>Updating</em>:
The definition of <code>Sort</code> makes no guarantee about the final order of equal values,
but the new behavior may still break programs that expect a specific order.
Such programs should either refine their <code>Less</code> implementations
to report the desired order
or should switch to
<a href="/pkg/sort/#Stable"><code>Stable</code></a>,
which preserves the original input order
of equal values.
</p>
<h3 id="template">Templates</h3>
<p>
In the
<a href="/pkg/text/template/">text/template</a> package,
there are two significant new features to make writing templates easier.
</p>
<p>
First, it is now possible to <a href="/pkg/text/template/#hdr-Text_and_spaces">trim spaces around template actions</a>,
which can make template definitions more readable.
A minus sign at the beginning of an action says to trim space before the action,
and a minus sign at the end of an action says to trim space after the action.
For example, the template
</p>
<pre>
{{"{{"}}23 -}}
&lt;
{{"{{"}}- 45}}
</pre>
<p>
formats as <code>23&lt;45</code>.
</p>
<p>
Second, the new <a href="/pkg/text/template/#hdr-Actions"><code>{{"{{"}}block}}</code> action</a>,
combined with allowing redefinition of named templates,
provides a simple way to define pieces of a template that
can be replaced in different instantiations.
There is <a href="/pkg/text/template/#example_Template_block">an example</a>
in the <code>text/template</code> package that demonstrates this new feature.
</p>
<h3 id="minor_library_changes">Minor changes to the library</h3>
<ul>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/archive/tar/"><code>archive/tar</code></a> package's
implementation corrects many bugs in rare corner cases of the file format.
One visible change is that the
<a href="/pkg/archive/tar/#Reader"><code>Reader</code></a> type's
<a href="/pkg/archive/tar/#Reader.Read"><code>Read</code></a> method
now presents the content of special file types as being empty,
returning <code>io.EOF</code> immediately.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/"><code>archive/zip</code></a> package, the
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Reader"><code>Reader</code></a> type now has a
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Reader.RegisterDecompressor"><code>RegisterDecompressor</code></a> method,
and the
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a> type now has a
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer.RegisterCompressor"><code>RegisterCompressor</code></a> method,
enabling control over compression options for individual zip files.
These take precedence over the pre-existing global
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#RegisterDecompressor"><code>RegisterDecompressor</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#RegisterCompressor"><code>RegisterCompressor</code></a> functions.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/bufio/"><code>bufio</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/bufio/#Scanner"><code>Scanner</code></a> type now has a
<a href="/pkg/bufio/#Scanner.Buffer"><code>Buffer</code></a> method,
to specify an initial buffer and maximum buffer size to use during scanning.
This makes it possible, when needed, to scan tokens larger than
<code>MaxScanTokenSize</code>.
Also for the <code>Scanner</code>, the package now defines the
<a href="/pkg/bufio/#ErrFinalToken"><code>ErrFinalToken</code></a> error value, for use by
<a href="/pkg/bufio/#SplitFunc">split functions</a> to abort processing or to return a final empty token.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/"><code>compress/flate</code></a> package
has deprecated its
<a href="/pkg/compress/flate/#ReadError"><code>ReadError</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/compress/flate/#WriteError"><code>WriteError</code></a> error implementations.
In Go 1.5 they were only rarely returned when an error was encountered;
now they are never returned, although they remain defined for compatibility.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/"><code>compress/flate</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/"><code>compress/gzip</code></a>, and
<a href="/pkg/compress/zlib/"><code>compress/zlib</code></a> packages
now report
<a href="/pkg/io/#ErrUnexpectedEOF"><code>io.ErrUnexpectedEOF</code></a> for truncated input streams, instead of
<a href="/pkg/io/#EOF"><code>io.EOF</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/cipher/"><code>crypto/cipher</code></a> package now
overwrites the destination buffer in the event of a GCM decryption failure.
This is to allow the AESNI code to avoid using a temporary buffer.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package
has a variety of minor changes.
It now allows
<a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#Listen"><code>Listen</code></a>
to succeed when the
<a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config"><code>Config</code></a>
has a nil <code>Certificates</code>, as long as the <code>GetCertificate</code> callback is set,
it adds support for RSA with AES-GCM cipher suites,
and
it adds a
<a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#RecordHeaderError"><code>RecordHeaderError</code></a>
to allow clients (in particular, the <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package)
to report a better error when attempting a TLS connection to a non-TLS server.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/"><code>crypto/x509</code></a> package
now permits certificates to contain negative serial numbers
(technically an error, but unfortunately common in practice),
and it defines a new
<a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/#InsecureAlgorithmError"><code>InsecureAlgorithmError</code></a>
to give a better error message when rejecting a certificate
signed with an insecure algorithm like MD5.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/debug/dwarf"><code>debug/dwarf</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/debug/elf/"><code>debug/elf</code></a> packages
together add support for compressed DWARF sections.
User code needs no updating: the sections are decompressed automatically when read.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/debug/elf/"><code>debug/elf</code></a> package
adds support for general compressed ELF sections.
User code needs no updating: the sections are decompressed automatically when read.
However, compressed
<a href="/pkg/debug/elf/#Section"><code>Sections</code></a> do not support random access:
they have a nil <code>ReaderAt</code> field.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/"><code>encoding/asn1</code></a> package
now exports
<a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/#pkg-constants">tag and class constants</a>
useful for advanced parsing of ASN.1 structures.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/"><code>encoding/asn1</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/#Unmarshal"><code>Unmarshal</code></a> now rejects various non-standard integer and length encodings.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/base64"><code>encoding/base64</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/encoding/base64/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a> has been fixed
to process the final bytes of its input. Previously it processed as many four-byte tokens as
possible but ignored the remainder, up to three bytes.
The <code>Decoder</code> therefore now handles inputs in unpadded encodings (like
<a href="/pkg/encoding/base64/#RawURLEncoding">RawURLEncoding</a>) correctly,
but it also rejects inputs in padded encodings that are truncated or end with invalid bytes,
such as trailing spaces.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> package
now checks the syntax of a
<a href="/pkg/encoding/json/#Number"><code>Number</code></a>
before marshaling it, requiring that it conforms to the JSON specification for numeric values.
As in previous releases, the zero <code>Number</code> (an empty string) is marshaled as a literal 0 (zero).
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Marshal"><code>Marshal</code></a>
function now supports a <code>cdata</code> attribute, such as <code>chardata</code>
but encoding its argument in one or more <code>&lt;![CDATA[ ... ]]&gt;</code> tags.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a>'s
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder.Token"><code>Token</code></a> method
now reports an error when encountering EOF before seeing all open tags closed,
consistent with its general requirement that tags in the input be properly matched.
To avoid that requirement, use
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder.RawToken"><code>RawToken</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package now allows
any integer type as an argument to
<a href="/pkg/fmt/#Printf"><code>Printf</code></a>'s <code>*</code> width and precision specification.
In previous releases, the argument to <code>*</code> was required to have type <code>int</code>.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/fmt/#Scanf"><code>Scanf</code></a> can now scan hexadecimal strings using %X, as an alias for %x.
Both formats accept any mix of upper- and lower-case hexadecimal.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/image/"><code>image</code></a>
and
<a href="/pkg/image/color/"><code>image/color</code></a> packages
add
<a href="/pkg/image/#NYCbCrA"><code>NYCbCrA</code></a>
and
<a href="/pkg/image/color/#NYCbCrA"><code>NYCbCrA</code></a>
types, to support Y'CbCr images with non-premultiplied alpha.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/io/"><code>io</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/io/#MultiWriter"><code>MultiWriter</code></a>
implementation now implements a <code>WriteString</code> method,
for use by
<a href="/pkg/io/#WriteString"><code>WriteString</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int"><code>Int</code></a> adds
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int.Append"><code>Append</code></a>
and
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int.Text"><code>Text</code></a>
methods to give more control over printing.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float"><code>Float</code></a> now implements
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextMarshaler"><code>encoding.TextMarshaler</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextUnmarshaler"><code>encoding.TextUnmarshaler</code></a>,
allowing it to be serialized in a natural form by the
<a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> and
<a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> packages.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float"><code>Float</code></a>'s
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float.Append"><code>Append</code></a> method now supports the special precision argument -1.
As in
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#ParseFloat"><code>strconv.ParseFloat</code></a>,
precision -1 means to use the smallest number of digits necessary such that
<a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float.Parse"><code>Parse</code></a>
reading the result into a <code>Float</code> of the same precision
will yield the original value.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/math/rand/"><code>math/rand</code></a> package
adds a
<a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Read"><code>Read</code></a>
function, and likewise
<a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Rand"><code>Rand</code></a> adds a
<a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Rand.Read"><code>Read</code></a> method.
These make it easier to generate pseudorandom test data.
Note that, like the rest of the package,
these should not be used in cryptographic settings;
for such purposes, use the <a href="/pkg/crypto/rand/"><code>crypto/rand</code></a> package instead.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/#ParseMAC"><code>ParseMAC</code></a> function now accepts 20-byte IP-over-InfiniBand (IPoIB) link-layer addresses.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package,
there have been a few changes to DNS lookups.
First, the
<a href="/pkg/net/#DNSError"><code>DNSError</code></a> error implementation now implements
<a href="/pkg/net/#Error"><code>Error</code></a>,
and in particular its new
<a href="/pkg/net/#DNSError.IsTemporary"><code>IsTemporary</code></a>
method returns true for DNS server errors.
Second, DNS lookup functions such as
<a href="/pkg/net/#LookupAddr"><code>LookupAddr</code></a>
now return rooted domain names (with a trailing dot)
on Plan 9 and Windows, to match the behavior of Go on Unix systems.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package has
a number of minor additions beyond the HTTP/2 support already discussed.
First, the
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#FileServer"><code>FileServer</code></a> now sorts its generated directory listings by file name.
Second, the
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#ServeFile"><code>ServeFile</code></a> function now refuses to serve a result
if the request's URL path contains &ldquo;..&rdquo; (dot-dot) as a path element.
Programs should typically use <code>FileServer</code> and
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Dir"><code>Dir</code></a>
instead of calling <code>ServeFile</code> directly.
Programs that need to serve file content in response to requests for URLs containing dot-dot can
still call <a href="/pkg/net/http/#ServeContent"><code>ServeContent</code></a>.
Third, the
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Client"><code>Client</code></a> now allows user code to set the
<code>Expect:</code> <code>100-continue</code> header (see
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport.ExpectContinueTimeout</code></a>).
Fourth, there are
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#pkg-constants">five new error codes</a>:
<code>StatusPreconditionRequired</code> (428),
<code>StatusTooManyRequests</code> (429),
<code>StatusRequestHeaderFieldsTooLarge</code> (431), and
<code>StatusNetworkAuthenticationRequired</code> (511) from RFC 6585,
as well as the recently-approved
<code>StatusUnavailableForLegalReasons</code> (451).
Fifth, the implementation and documentation of
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#CloseNotifier"><code>CloseNotifier</code></a>
has been substantially changed.
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Hijacker"><code>Hijacker</code></a>
interface now works correctly on connections that have previously
been used with <code>CloseNotifier</code>.
The documentation now describes when <code>CloseNotifier</code>
is expected to work.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package,
there are a few changes related to the handling of a
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request"><code>Request</code></a> data structure with its <code>Method</code> field set to the empty string.
An empty <code>Method</code> field has always been documented as an alias for <code>"GET"</code>
and it remains so.
However, Go 1.6 fixes a few routines that did not treat an empty
<code>Method</code> the same as an explicit <code>"GET"</code>.
Most notably, in previous releases
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Client"><code>Client</code></a> followed redirects only with
<code>Method</code> set explicitly to <code>"GET"</code>;
in Go 1.6 <code>Client</code> also follows redirects for the empty <code>Method</code>.
Finally,
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#NewRequest"><code>NewRequest</code></a> accepts a <code>method</code> argument that has not been
documented as allowed to be empty.
In past releases, passing an empty <code>method</code> argument resulted
in a <code>Request</code> with an empty <code>Method</code> field.
In Go 1.6, the resulting <code>Request</code> always has an initialized
<code>Method</code> field: if its argument is an empty string, <code>NewRequest</code>
sets the <code>Method</code> field in the returned <code>Request</code> to <code>"GET"</code>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/http/httptest/"><code>net/http/httptest</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/http/httptest/#ResponseRecorder"><code>ResponseRecorder</code></a> now initializes a default Content-Type header
using the same content-sniffing algorithm as in
<a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>http.Server</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/net/url/"><code>net/url</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/net/url/#Parse"><code>Parse</code></a> is now stricter and more spec-compliant regarding the parsing
of host names.
For example, spaces in the host name are no longer accepted.
</li>
<li>
Also in the <a href="/pkg/net/url/"><code>net/url</code></a> package,
the <a href="/pkg/net/url/#Error"><code>Error</code></a> type now implements
<a href="/pkg/net/#Error"><code>net.Error</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/os/"><code>os</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/os/#IsExist"><code>IsExist</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/os/#IsNotExist"><code>IsNotExist</code></a>,
and
<a href="/pkg/os/#IsPermission"><code>IsPermission</code></a>
now return correct results when inquiring about an
<a href="/pkg/os/#SyscallError"><code>SyscallError</code></a>.
</li>
<li>
On Unix-like systems, when a write
to <a href="/pkg/os/#pkg-variables"><code>os.Stdout</code>
or <code>os.Stderr</code></a> (more precisely, an <code>os.File</code>
opened for file descriptor 1 or 2) fails due to a broken pipe error,
the program will raise a <code>SIGPIPE</code> signal.
By default this will cause the program to exit; this may be changed by
calling the
<a href="/pkg/os/signal"><code>os/signal</code></a>
<a href="/pkg/os/signal/#Notify"><code>Notify</code></a> function
for <code>syscall.SIGPIPE</code>.
A write to a broken pipe on a file descriptor other 1 or 2 will simply
return <code>syscall.EPIPE</code> (possibly wrapped in
<a href="/pkg/os#PathError"><code>os.PathError</code></a>
and/or <a href="/pkg/os#SyscallError"><code>os.SyscallError</code></a>)
to the caller.
The old behavior of raising an uncatchable <code>SIGPIPE</code> signal
after 10 consecutive writes to a broken pipe no longer occurs.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/os/exec/"><code>os/exec</code></a> package,
<a href="/pkg/os/exec/#Cmd"><code>Cmd</code></a>'s
<a href="/pkg/os/exec/#Cmd.Output"><code>Output</code></a> method continues to return an
<a href="/pkg/os/exec/#ExitError"><code>ExitError</code></a> when a command exits with an unsuccessful status.
If standard error would otherwise have been discarded,
the returned <code>ExitError</code> now holds a prefix and suffix
(currently 32 kB) of the failed command's standard error output,
for debugging or for inclusion in error messages.
The <code>ExitError</code>'s
<a href="/pkg/os/exec/#ExitError.String"><code>String</code></a>
method does not show the captured standard error;
programs must retrieve it from the data structure
separately.
</li>
<li>
On Windows, the <a href="/pkg/path/filepath/"><code>path/filepath</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/path/filepath/#Join"><code>Join</code></a> function now correctly handles the case when the base is a relative drive path.
For example, <code>Join(`c:`,</code> <code>`a`)</code> now
returns <code>`c:a`</code> instead of <code>`c:\a`</code> as in past releases.
This may affect code that expects the incorrect result.
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/regexp/"><code>regexp</code></a> package,
the
<a href="/pkg/regexp/#Regexp"><code>Regexp</code></a> type has always been safe for use by
concurrent goroutines.
It uses a <a href="/pkg/sync/#Mutex"><code>sync.Mutex</code></a> to protect
a cache of scratch spaces used during regular expression searches.
Some high-concurrency servers using the same <code>Regexp</code> from many goroutines
have seen degraded performance due to contention on that mutex.
To help such servers, <code>Regexp</code> now has a
<a href="/pkg/regexp/#Regexp.Copy"><code>Copy</code></a> method,
which makes a copy of a <code>Regexp</code> that shares most of the structure
of the original but has its own scratch space cache.
Two goroutines can use different copies of a <code>Regexp</code>
without mutex contention.
A copy does have additional space overhead, so <code>Copy</code>
should only be used when contention has been observed.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/strconv/"><code>strconv</code></a> package adds
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#IsGraphic"><code>IsGraphic</code></a>,
similar to <a href="/pkg/strconv/#IsPrint"><code>IsPrint</code></a>.
It also adds
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteToGraphic"><code>QuoteToGraphic</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteRuneToGraphic"><code>QuoteRuneToGraphic</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#AppendQuoteToGraphic"><code>AppendQuoteToGraphic</code></a>,
and
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic"><code>AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic</code></a>,
analogous to
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteToASCII"><code>QuoteToASCII</code></a>,
<a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteRuneToASCII"><code>QuoteRuneToASCII</code></a>,
and so on.
The <code>ASCII</code> family escapes all space characters except ASCII space (U+0020).
In contrast, the <code>Graphic</code> family does not escape any Unicode space characters (category Zs).
</li>
<li>
In the <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package,
when a test calls
<a href="/pkg/testing/#T.Parallel">t.Parallel</a>,
that test is paused until all non-parallel tests complete, and then
that test continues execution with all other parallel tests.
Go 1.6 changes the time reported for such a test:
previously the time counted only the parallel execution,
but now it also counts the time from the start of testing
until the call to <code>t.Parallel</code>.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/text/template/"><code>text/template</code></a> package
contains two minor changes, in addition to the <a href="#template">major changes</a>
described above.
First, it adds a new
<a href="/pkg/text/template/#ExecError"><code>ExecError</code></a> type
returned for any error during
<a href="/pkg/text/template/#Template.Execute"><code>Execute</code></a>
that does not originate in a <code>Write</code> to the underlying writer.
Callers can distinguish template usage errors from I/O errors by checking for
<code>ExecError</code>.
Second, the
<a href="/pkg/text/template/#Template.Funcs"><code>Funcs</code></a> method
now checks that the names used as keys in the
<a href="/pkg/text/template/#FuncMap"><code>FuncMap</code></a>
are identifiers that can appear in a template function invocation.
If not, <code>Funcs</code> panics.
</li>
<li>
The <a href="/pkg/time/"><code>time</code></a> package's
<a href="/pkg/time/#Parse"><code>Parse</code></a> function has always rejected any day of month larger than 31,
such as January 32.
In Go 1.6, <code>Parse</code> now also rejects February 29 in non-leap years,
February 30, February 31, April 31, June 31, September 31, and November 31.
</li>
</ul>

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@@ -0,0 +1,202 @@
<!--{
"Title": "Go 1 and the Future of Go Programs",
"Path": "/doc/go1compat"
}-->
<h2 id="introduction">Introduction</h2>
<p>
The release of Go version 1, Go 1 for short, is a major milestone
in the development of the language. Go 1 is a stable platform for
the growth of programs and projects written in Go.
</p>
<p>
Go 1 defines two things: first, the specification of the language;
and second, the specification of a set of core APIs, the "standard
packages" of the Go library. The Go 1 release includes their
implementation in the form of two compiler suites (gc and gccgo),
and the core libraries themselves.
</p>
<p>
It is intended that programs written to the Go 1 specification will
continue to compile and run correctly, unchanged, over the lifetime
of that specification. At some indefinite point, a Go 2 specification
may arise, but until that time, Go programs that work today should
continue to work even as future "point" releases of Go 1 arise (Go
1.1, Go 1.2, etc.).
</p>
<p>
Compatibility is at the source level. Binary compatibility for
compiled packages is not guaranteed between releases. After a point
release, Go source will need to be recompiled to link against the
new release.
</p>
<p>
The APIs may grow, acquiring new packages and features, but not in
a way that breaks existing Go 1 code.
</p>
<h2 id="expectations">Expectations</h2>
<p>
Although we expect that the vast majority of programs will maintain
this compatibility over time, it is impossible to guarantee that
no future change will break any program. This document is an attempt
to set expectations for the compatibility of Go 1 software in the
future. There are a number of ways in which a program that compiles
and runs today may fail to do so after a future point release. They
are all unlikely but worth recording.
</p>
<ul>
<li>
Security. A security issue in the specification or implementation
may come to light whose resolution requires breaking compatibility.
We reserve the right to address such security issues.
</li>
<li>
Unspecified behavior. The Go specification tries to be explicit
about most properties of the language, but there are some aspects
that are undefined. Programs that depend on such unspecified behavior
may break in future releases.
</li>
<li>
Specification errors. If it becomes necessary to address an
inconsistency or incompleteness in the specification, resolving the
issue could affect the meaning or legality of existing programs.
We reserve the right to address such issues, including updating the
implementations. Except for security issues, no incompatible changes
to the specification would be made.
</li>
<li>
Bugs. If a compiler or library has a bug that violates the
specification, a program that depends on the buggy behavior may
break if the bug is fixed. We reserve the right to fix such bugs.
</li>
<li>
Struct literals. For the addition of features in later point
releases, it may be necessary to add fields to exported structs in
the API. Code that uses unkeyed struct literals (such as pkg.T{3,
"x"}) to create values of these types would fail to compile after
such a change. However, code that uses keyed literals (pkg.T{A:
3, B: "x"}) will continue to compile after such a change. We will
update such data structures in a way that allows keyed struct
literals to remain compatible, although unkeyed literals may fail
to compile. (There are also more intricate cases involving nested
data structures or interfaces, but they have the same resolution.)
We therefore recommend that composite literals whose type is defined
in a separate package should use the keyed notation.
</li>
<li>
Methods. As with struct fields, it may be necessary to add methods
to types.
Under some circumstances, such as when the type is embedded in
a struct along with another type,
the addition of the new method may break
the struct by creating a conflict with an existing method of the other
embedded type.
We cannot protect against this rare case and do not guarantee compatibility
should it arise.
</li>
<li>
Dot imports. If a program imports a standard package
using <code>import . "path"</code>, additional names defined in the
imported package in future releases may conflict with other names
defined in the program. We do not recommend the use of <code>import .</code>
outside of tests, and using it may cause a program to fail
to compile in future releases.
</li>
<li>
Use of package <code>unsafe</code>. Packages that import
<a href="/pkg/unsafe/"><code>unsafe</code></a>
may depend on internal properties of the Go implementation.
We reserve the right to make changes to the implementation
that may break such programs.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
Of course, for all of these possibilities, should they arise, we
would endeavor whenever feasible to update the specification,
compilers, or libraries without affecting existing code.
</p>
<p>
These same considerations apply to successive point releases. For
instance, code that runs under Go 1.2 should be compatible with Go
1.2.1, Go 1.3, Go 1.4, etc., although not necessarily with Go 1.1
since it may use features added only in Go 1.2
</p>
<p>
Features added between releases, available in the source repository
but not part of the numbered binary releases, are under active
development. No promise of compatibility is made for software using
such features until they have been released.
</p>
<p>
Finally, although it is not a correctness issue, it is possible
that the performance of a program may be affected by
changes in the implementation of the compilers or libraries upon
which it depends.
No guarantee can be made about the performance of a
given program between releases.
</p>
<p>
Although these expectations apply to Go 1 itself, we hope similar
considerations would be made for the development of externally
developed software based on Go 1.
</p>
<h2 id="subrepos">Sub-repositories</h2>
<p>
Code in sub-repositories of the main go tree, such as
<a href="//golang.org/x/net">golang.org/x/net</a>,
may be developed under
looser compatibility requirements. However, the sub-repositories
will be tagged as appropriate to identify versions that are compatible
with the Go 1 point releases.
</p>
<h2 id="operating_systems">Operating systems</h2>
<p>
It is impossible to guarantee long-term compatibility with operating
system interfaces, which are changed by outside parties.
The <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> package
is therefore outside the purview of the guarantees made here.
As of Go version 1.4, the <code>syscall</code> package is frozen.
Any evolution of the system call interface must be supported elsewhere,
such as in the
<a href="//golang.org/x/sys">go.sys</a> subrepository.
For details and background, see
<a href="//golang.org/s/go1.4-syscall">this document</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="tools">Tools</h2>
<p>
Finally, the Go tool chain (compilers, linkers, build tools, and so
on) are under active development and may change behavior. This
means, for instance, that scripts that depend on the location and
properties of the tools may be broken by a point release.
</p>
<p>
These caveats aside, we believe that Go 1 will be a firm foundation
for the development of Go and its ecosystem.
</p>

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@@ -273,7 +273,9 @@ func f() {
a = "hello, world"
&lt;-c
}
</pre>
<pre>
func main() {
go f()
c &lt;- 0
@@ -416,12 +418,8 @@ func twoprint() {
</pre>
<p>
calling <code>twoprint</code> will call <code>setup</code> exactly
once.
The <code>setup</code> function will complete before either call
of <code>print</code>.
The result will be that <code>"hello, world"</code> will be printed
twice.
calling <code>twoprint</code> causes <code>"hello, world"</code> to be printed twice.
The first call to <code>doprint</code> runs <code>setup</code> once.
</p>
<h2>Incorrect synchronization</h2>

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The Go gopher was designed by Renee French. (http://reneefrench.blogspot.com/)
The design is licensed under the Creative Commons 3.0 Attributions license.
Read this article for more details: https://blog.golang.org/gopher

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