Also: Use defer to make sure scopes are always closed
even in case of early exits via bailout (and don't cause
an imbalanced scope error in debug mode).
R=adonovan, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/29300043
- consolidate them in (expr|type)string[_test].go
- support for printing all ast.Expr
- fix printing of type: chan (<-chan int) (parentheses)
- more consistent names, comments, and exports
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/28680043
These are variants of Type.String(), Object.String() that
accept a 'from *Package' argument. If provided, package
qualification is omitted when printing named types belonging
to that package.
This is useful for UIs where a package is implied by context
e.g. ssadump disassembly, oracle output.
+ Test.
R=gri, gri, gordon.klaus
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/22190048
- fixed a couple of TODOs
- various cleanups along the way
- adjusted clients
Once submitted, clients of go/types that don't explicitly
specify Config.Import will need to add the extra import:
import _ "code.google.com/p/go.tools/go/gcimporter"
to install the default (gc) importer in go/types.
R=adonovan, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/26390043
Depending on the context, printing only the package name can
be ambiguous or even incorrect since it is valid only within
the environment of a given file's import specs.
(The standard library packages are mostly unique in their last
segment, but this is not the case for proprietary repos.)
R=gri, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/26300043
This check is currently done in go/parser as well but
eventually can be removed from there (after Go 1.2).
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/22240045
Initialization cycles need to reported for cycles
that contain variables, even if they don't end in
a variable.
This fixes the last known issue with the existing
std library tests.
R=adonovan, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/22200049
The gc compiler is inconsistent how it handles method
"mentions" with respect to initialization cycle detection
(see issue 6703 for details). Pending a spec clarification,
this CL assumes that for a method to be "mentioned", it
must be mentioned as a method expression rather than a
method value (closer in intent to "syntactic" mention).
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/22050044
- Info.InitOrder now provides list of Initializers
(vars + init expr), handling n:1 decls and blank
identifiers
- added respective API test
- cycles detected through function "mentions"
Missing: cycles through method "mentions" and via
closures
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/21810043
Missing:
- dependencies via functions (incl. closures and methods)
- more tests (incl. API test)
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/20510043
- better error messages
- in contrast to a long-standing TODO, comparisons
between interface and non-interface types always
worked correctly
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/17310043
The spec does not exclude blank _ method names in interfaces
from the uniqueness criteria; i.e., at most one blank method
may appear in an interface type.
Arguably the spec is vague (and possibly incorrect) here.
gccgo handles it the same way. gc crashes with an internal
compiler error.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/16380043
Motivation:
Previously, we assumed that the set of types for which a
complete method set (containing all synthesized wrapper
functions) is required at runtime was the set of types
used as operands to some *ssa.MakeInterface instruction.
In fact, this is an underapproximation because types can
be derived from other ones via reflection, and some of
these may need methods. The reflect.Type API allows *T to
be derived from T, and these may have different method
sets. Reflection also allows almost any subcomponent of a
type to be accessed (with one exception: given T, defined
'type T struct{S}', you can reach S but not struct{S}).
As a result, the pointer analysis was unable to generate
all necessary constraints before running the solver,
causing a crash when reflection derives types whose
methods are unavailable. (A similar problem would afflict
an ahead-of-time compiler based on ssa. The ssa/interp
interpreter was immune only because it does not require
all wrapper methods to be created before execution
begins.)
Description:
This change causes the SSA builder to record, for each
package, the set of all types with non-empty method sets that
are referenced within that package. This set is accessed via
Packages.TypesWithMethodSets(). Program.TypesWithMethodSets()
returns its union across all packages.
The set of references that matter are:
- types of operands to some MakeInterface instruction (as before)
- types of all exported package members
- all subcomponents of the above, recursively.
This is a conservative approximation to the set of types
whose methods may be called dynamically.
We define the owning package of a type as follows:
- the owner of a named type is the package in which it is defined;
- the owner of a pointer-to-named type is the owner of that named type;
- the owner of all other types is nil.
A package must include the method sets for all types that it
owns, and all subcomponents of that type that are not owned by
another package, recursively. Types with an owner appear in
exactly one package; types with no owner (such as struct{T})
may appear within multiple packages.
(A typical Go compiler would emit multiple copies of these
methods as weak symbols; a typical linker would eliminate
duplicates.)
Also:
- go/types/typemap: implement hash function for *Tuple.
- pointer: generate nodes/constraints for all of
ssa.Program.TypesWithMethodSets().
Add rtti.go regression test.
- Add API test of Package.TypesWithMethodSets().
- Set Function.Pkg to nil (again) for wrapper functions,
since these may be shared by many packages.
- Remove a redundant logging statement.
- Document that ssa CREATE phase is in fact sequential.
Fixesgolang/go#6605
R=gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14920056
This will make it a bit easier to create commonly used "custom" sizes for types.
With this CL, interfaces are now by default 2*WordSize (= 16) instead of 1*WordSize
as before.
Also: minor unrelated cleanups.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14719043
Given a built-in call f(args), Info.Types now maps f to the call-site
specific type of f (by looking at the argument types) if the built-in
call is not producing a constant (at typecheck time) result. If the
result is constant, the recorded type is invalid (a back-end won't
need it).
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14598045
Catch ... errors earlier and in case of error, type-check all
arguments anyway for better type reporting and fewer "declared
but not used" errors.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14600043
Assignments to "comma, ok" expressions on the lhs of an
assignment are not permitted unless we have map index
"comma, ok" expression. Created new operand mode 'mapindex'
to distinguish this case. Renamed mode 'valueok' to the more
commonly used 'commaok' term, which also makes it easier to
distinguish from simply 'value'.
Added corresponding tests.
Fixes a TODO.
R=adonovan
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/14526049