Adjust the hash and string fields computed by StructOf to match the
values that the compiler computes for a struct type with the same
field names and types. This makes the reflect code match the
compiler's Type::hash_for_method and Type::reflection methods.
Fixesgolang/go#25284
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/116515
From-SVN: r261235
Background: since gccgo does not currently merge identical types at link time,
the reflect function canonicalize() exists to choose a canonical specimen
for each set of identical types.
In this way, user code has the guarantee that identical types
will always compare as ==
Change: arrange reflect functions MapOf(), SliceOf(), StructOf() etc.
to call canonicalize() on the types they create, before storing the types
in internal lookup caches and returning them.
This fixes known cases where canonicalize() is needed but was missing.
Supersedes https://golang.org/cl/112575 and mostly fixes issue 25284.
Updates golang/go#25284
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/115577
From-SVN: r261216
Backport https://golang.org/cl/113715 and https://golang.org/cl/113716:
cmd/go: don't pass -compiler flag to vet
Without this running go vet -compiler=gccgo causes vet to fail.
The vet tool does need to know the compiler, but it is passed in
vetConfig.Compiler.
cmd/go, cmd/vet, go/internal/gccgoimport: make vet work with gccgo
When using gccgo/GoLLVM, there is no package file for a standard
library package. Since it is impossible for the go tool to rebuild the
package, and since the package file exists only in the form of a .gox
file, this seems like the best choice. Unfortunately it was confusing
vet, which wanted to see a real file. This caused vet to report errors
about missing package files for standard library packages. The
gccgoimporter knows how to correctly handle this case. Fix this by
1) telling vet which packages are standard;
2) letting vet skip those packages;
3) letting the gccgoimporter handle this case.
As a separate required fix, gccgo/GoLLVM has no runtime/cgo package,
so don't try to depend on it (as it happens, this fixesgolang/go#25324).
The result is that the cmd/go vet tests pass when using -compiler=gccgo.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/114516
From-SVN: r260913
Several recent changes to the gc version of cmd/go improve the
gofrontend support. These changes are partially copies of existing
gofrontend differences, and partially new code. This CL makes the
gofrontend match the upstream code.
The changes included here come from:
https://golang.org/cl/111575https://golang.org/cl/111595https://golang.org/cl/111635https://golang.org/cl/111636
For the record, the following recent gc changes are based on code
already present in the gofrontend repo:
https://golang.org/cl/110915https://golang.org/cl/111615
For the record, a gc change, partially based on earlier gofrontend
work, also with new gc code, was already copied to gofrontend repo in
CL 111099:
https://golang.org/cl/111097
This moves the generated list of standard library packages from
cmd/go/internal/load to go/build.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/112475
gotools/:
* Makefile.am (check-go-tool): Don't copy zstdpkglist.go.
* Makefile.in: Rebuild.
From-SVN: r260097
In https://golang.org/cl/111097 the gc version of cmd/go was updated
to include some gofrontend-specific changes. The gofrontend code
already has different versions of those changes; this CL makes the
gofrontend match the upstream code.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/111099
From-SVN: r259918
These tests used to be disabled in the gofrontend since the go tool
didn't support build IDs for the gofrontend. It does now, so enable
the tests again.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/111098
From-SVN: r259875
We're never going to use stack.go for gccgo. Although a build tag
keeps it from being built, even having it around can be confusing.
Remove it.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/40774
From-SVN: r259865
Bring in https://golang.org/cl/98616 from gc tip.
Original CL description:
This change modifies Go to disable loading of users' shell history for
TestTerminalSignal tests. TestTerminalSignal, as part of its workload,
will execute a new interactive bash shell. Bash will attempt to load the
user's history from the file pointed to by the HISTFILE environment
variable. For users with large histories that may take up to several
seconds, pushing the whole test past the 5 second timeout and causing
it to fail.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/107624
From-SVN: r259452
The gccgo runtime is never stale, and on a system with gc sources in
~/go the test may wind up checking whether the gc runtime is stale.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/102282
From-SVN: r258865
PR go/84484
libgo: add support for riscv64
Patch by Andreas Schwab.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/96377
* go.test/go-test.exp (go-set-goarch): Recognize riscv64-*-*.
From-SVN: r257914
Let a fast syscall return be a preemption point. This helps with
tight loops that make system calls, as in BenchmarkSyscallExcessWork.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/94895
From-SVN: r257848
Long long long ago Go permitted writing
func F()
in one file and writing
func F() {}
in another file. This was removed from the language, and that is now
considered to be a multiple definition error. Gccgo never caught up
to that, and it has been permitting this invalid code for some time.
Stop permitting it, so that we give correct errors. Since we've
supported it for a long time, the compiler uses it in a couple of
cases: it predeclares the hash/equal methods if it decides to create
them while compiling another function, and it predeclares main.main as
a mechanism for getting the right warning if a program uses the wrong
signature for main. For simplicity, keep those existing uses.
This required a few minor changes in libgo which were relying,
unnecessarily, on the current behavior.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93083
From-SVN: r257600
PR go/84215
runtime, sync/atomic: use write barrier for atomic pointer functions
This copies atomic_pointer.go from 1.10rc2. It was omitted during the
transition of the runtime from C to Go, and I forgot about it.
This may help with https://gcc.gnu.org/PR84215.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93197
From-SVN: r257599
If we trace back through code that has no debug info, as when calling
through C code compiled with -g0, we won't have a function name.
Try to fetch the function name using the symbol table.
Adding the test case revealed that gotest failed to use the gccgo tag
when matching files, so add that.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/92756
From-SVN: r257495
The escape analysis support is not yet good enough to avoid escaping
the argument to funcPC. This causes unnecessary and often harmful
memory allocation. E.g., (*cpuProfile).addExtra can be called from a
signal handler, and it must not allocate memory.
Move the calls to funcPC to use variables instead. This was done in
the original migration to using funcPC, but was not done for newer code.
In one case, in signal handling code, use getSigtramp.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/92735
From-SVN: r257463
The quoting code that read _cgo_flags, currently only in the gccgo
version of cmd/go, was losing the last flag read from the file.
Fixesgolang/go#23666
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/91655
From-SVN: r257373
They were disabled due to the lack of escape analysis. Now that
we have escape analysis, unskip these tests.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/86248
From-SVN: r257324
On ia64, a separate stack is used for saving/restoring register frames,
occupying the other end of the stack mapping. This must also be scanned
for pointers into the heap.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/85276
From-SVN: r257323
We were using special compilation flags for the math package, but we
weren't using them when testing. That meant that our tests were not
checking the real code we were providing. Fix that.
Fixing that revealed that we were not using a good set of flags, or at
least were not using flags that let the tests pass. Adjust the flags
to stop using -funsafe-math-optimizations on x86. Instead always use
-ffp-contract=off -fno-math-errno -fno-trapping-math for all targets.
Fixesgolang/go#23647
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/91355
From-SVN: r257312
Otherwise on a 64-bit system we will read the 32-bit value as a 64-bit
value. Since getaddrinfo returns negative numbers as error values,
these will be interpreted as numbers like 0xfffffffe rather than -2,
and the comparisons with values like syscall.EAI_NONAME will fail.
Fixesgolang/go#23645
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/91296
From-SVN: r257299
On ppc64 gotest treats data variables whose names begin with "Test" as
tests to run. This is to support the function descriptors used for
ppc64 ELF ABI v1. This causes gotest to think that TestAddr6 is a
test, when it is actually a variable. For a simple fix until we can
figure out how to write gotest properly, rename the variable.
Fixesgolang/go#23623
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/90995
From-SVN: r257235
CL 84555 added support for the SuperH architecture, but didn't add the
randomTrap definition to be used for the getrandom syscall on Linux.
Add it now.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/90535
From-SVN: r257171
This was the original intent, as reflected in the long comment at the
start of names.cc, but I forgot to implement it.
Also, remove a leading ".0" from the final name. That could occur for
a method whose receiver type starts with 'u', as in that case we
prepend a space to the mangled name, to avoid confusion with the
Unicode mangling, and the space turns into ".0".
Also, if the Unicode encoding would cause the final to start with
"..u" or "..U", add a leading underscore.
Patch gotest to not get fooled by some names.
The result of these changes is that all symbols start with a letter or
an underscore.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/90015
From-SVN: r257068
The top three region number bits must be masked out before
right-shifting the address bits into place, otherwise they will be
copied down into the lower always-zero address bits.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/84535
From-SVN: r257061
Encode all external symbol names using only ASCII alphanumeric
characters, underscore, and dot. Use a scheme that can be reliably
demangled to a somewhat readable version as described in the long
comment in names.cc.
A minor cleanup discovered during this was that we were treating
function types as different if one had a NULL parameters_ field and
another has a non-NULL parameters_ field that has no parameters. This
worked because we mangled them slightly differently. We now mangle
them the same, so we treat them as equal, as we should anyhow.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/89555
* go.go-torture/execute/names-1.go: New test.
From-SVN: r257033
PR go/83787
compiler: pass int to makechan, call makechan64 when appropriate
The update to 1.10beta1 changed makechan to take int instead of int64,
and added a makechan64 call for large values. Since the size is the
last argument to makechan, the old compiler which always passed a
64-bit int worked fine on 64-bit systems and little-endian 32-bit
systems, but broke on big-endian 32-bit systems. This CL fixes the
compiler to use the appropriate types.
This fixes GCC PR 83787.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/88077
From-SVN: r256835
Move the architecture-specific settings out of configure.ac into a new
shell script goarch.sh. Use the new script to collect the values for
all architectures to make them available in go/types.
Also fix cmd/vet to pass the right compiler when it calls SizesFor.
This fixes cmd/vet for systems that are not implemented in the gc
toolchain, such as alpha and ia64.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/87635
From-SVN: r256655
Add missing .a files. These should have been committed with the
update to go1.10beta1, but were skipped because by default Subversion
ignores all files matching *.a.
From-SVN: r256442
PR c/82922
runtime, syscall: use full prototypes in C code
Based on patch by Martin Sebor.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/86815
From-SVN: r256437
GCC always recognizes the -fsplit-stack option, but then tests whether
it is supported by the selected target. If not, it reports
cc1: error: ‘-fsplit-stack’ is not supported by this compiler configuration
Check for that error message when deciding whether a compiler option works.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/87137
From-SVN: r256433
When compiling runtime, it is not allowed for local variables
and closures to be heap allocated. In one test, there is a go
statement with a closure. In the gc compiler, it distinguishes
capturing variable by value vs. by address, and rewrites it to
passing the captured values as arguments. Currently we don't
have this, and the escape analysis decides to heap allocate the
closure and also the captured variables, which is not allowed.
Work around it by passing the variables explicitly.
This is in preparation of turning on escape analysis for the
runtime.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/86245
From-SVN: r256419
This is in preparation of turning on escape analysis for the
runtime.
- In gccgo, systemstack is implemented with mcall, which is not
go:noescape. Wrap the closure in noescape so the escape analysis
does not think it escapes.
- Mark some C functions go:noescape. They do not leak arguments.
- Use noescape function to make a few local variables' addresses
not escape. The escape analysis cannot figure out because they
are assigned to pointer indirections.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/86244
From-SVN: r256418
Update the Go library to the 1.10beta1 release.
Requires a few changes to the compiler for modifications to the map
runtime code, and to handle some nowritebarrier cases in the runtime.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/86455
gotools/:
* Makefile.am (go_cmd_vet_files): New variable.
(go_cmd_buildid_files, go_cmd_test2json_files): New variables.
(s-zdefaultcc): Change from constants to functions.
(noinst_PROGRAMS): Add vet, buildid, and test2json.
(cgo$(EXEEXT)): Link against $(LIBGOTOOL).
(vet$(EXEEXT)): New target.
(buildid$(EXEEXT)): New target.
(test2json$(EXEEXT)): New target.
(install-exec-local): Install all $(noinst_PROGRAMS).
(uninstall-local): Uninstasll all $(noinst_PROGRAMS).
(check-go-tool): Depend on $(noinst_PROGRAMS). Copy down
objabi.go.
(check-runtime): Depend on $(noinst_PROGRAMS).
(check-cgo-test, check-carchive-test): Likewise.
(check-vet): New target.
(check): Depend on check-vet. Look at cmd_vet-testlog.
(.PHONY): Add check-vet.
* Makefile.in: Rebuild.
From-SVN: r256365
The functions cgoCheckPointer and cgoCheckResult are called by code
generated by cgo. That means that we need to export them using
go:linkname, as otherwise they are local symbols. The cgo code
currently uses weak references to only call the symbols if they are
defined, which is why it has been working--the cgo code has not been
doing any checks.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/80295
From-SVN: r255347
For a misaligned address force a panic rather than assuming that reading
from the address 0 will cause one.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/69850
From-SVN: r254610
Also fix 64-bit DWARF to read a 64-bit abbrev offset in the
compilation unit.
This is a backport of https://golang.org/cl/71171, which will be in
the Go 1.10 release, to the gofrontend copy. Doing it now because AIX
is pretty much the only system that uses 64-bit DWARF.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/72250
From-SVN: r253955
In preparation for upgrading libgo to the 1.9 release, this
approximately incorporates https://golang.org/cl/37661 and
https://golang.org/cl/38351.
CL 37661 changed the gc compiler such that the select statement simply
returns an integer which is then used as the argument for a switch.
Since gccgo already worked that way, this just adjusts the switch code
to look like the gc switch code by removing the explicit case index
expression and calculating it from the order of calls to selectsend,
selectrecv, and selectdefault.
CL 38351 simplifies the channel code by not passing the unused channel
type descriptor pointer.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/62730
From-SVN: r252749
This adds much of https://golang.org/cl/35731 and
https://golang.org/cl/35732 to the gofrontend code.
This is a step toward updating libgo to the 1.9 release. The
gofrontend already supports type aliases, and this is required for
correct support of type aliases when used as embedded fields.
The change to expressions.cc is to handle the << 1, used for the
newly renamed offsetAnon field, in the constant context used for type
descriptor initialization.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/62710
From-SVN: r252746
Using -funwind-tables is necessary to permit Go code to correctly
throw a panic through C code. This hasn't been necessary in the past
as -funwind-tables is the default on x86. However, it is not the
default for PPC AIX.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/56650
From-SVN: r251179
Libgo's implementation of math.Ldexp declared the libc "ldexp" as
taking an 'int' exponent argument, which is not quite right for 64-bit
platforms (exp arg is always int32); this could yield incorrect
results for exponent values outside the range of Minint32/Maxint32.
Fix by upating the type for the libc version of ldexp, and adding
guards to screen for out-of-range exponents.
Fixes#21323.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/54250
From-SVN: r250992
We unconditionally set _FILE_OFFSET_BITS to 64 in configure.ac, so we
should unconditionally call the statfs64 and fstatfs64 functions.
These functions should be available on all versions of GNU/Linux since 2.6.
On 64-bit systems they are aliased to statfs/fstatfs, and on 32-bit
systems they use the 64-bit data structures.
Fixesgolang/go#20922
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/50635
From-SVN: r250443
Allocate enough stack space so that the test will work on a system
that does not support split stacks.
This test is actually not very meaningful for gccgo at present, but it
doesn't hurt to keep running it.
Updates golang/go#20931
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/50630
From-SVN: r250433
PR go/81451
runtime: inline runtime_osinit
We had two identical copies of runtime_osinit. They set runtime_ncpu,
a variable that is no longer used. Removing that leaves us with two lines.
Inline those two lines in the two places the function was called.
This fixes GCC PR 81451.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/48862
From-SVN: r250326
PR go/81393
syscall: don't use GETREGS/SETREGS on s390
They were removed in recent glibc.
Patch by Andreas Krebbel for GCC PR 81393.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/48231
From-SVN: r250174
On AIX:
* mmap does not allow to map an already mapped range,
* mmap range start at 0x30000000 for 32 bits processes,
* mmap range start at 0x70000000_00000000 for 64 bits processes
This is adapted from change 37845.
Issue golang/go#19200
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/46772
From-SVN: r249713
Fixes required now that we #include <linux/ptrace.h> in sysinfo.c.
Patch by Andreas Krebbel.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/46839
From-SVN: r249712
When C code calls a Go function, it actually calls a function
generated by cgo. That function is written in Go, and, among other
things, it calls the real Go function like this:
CgocallBack()
defer CgocallBackDone()
RealGoFunction()
The deferred CgocallBackDone function enters syscall mode as we return
to C. Typically the C function will then eventually return to Go.
However, in the case where the C function is running on a thread
created in C, it will not return to Go. For that case we will have
allocated an m struct, with an associated g struct, for the duration
of the Go code, and when the Go is complete we will return the m and g
to a free list.
That all works, but we are running in a deferred function, which means
that we have been invoked by deferreturn, and deferreturn expects to
do a bit of cleanup to record that the defer has been completed. Doing
that cleanup while using an m and g that have already been returned to
the free list is clearly a bad idea. It was kind of working because
deferreturn was holding the g pointer in a local variable, but there
were races with some other thread picking up and using the newly freed g.
It was also kind of working because of a special check in freedefer;
that check is no longer necessary.
This patch changes the special case of releasing the m and g to do the
defer cleanup in CgocallBackDone itself.
This patch also checks for the special case of a panic through
CgocallBackDone. In that special case, we don't want to release the m
and g. Since we are returning to C code that was not called by Go
code, we know that the panic is not going to be caught and we are
going to exit the program. So for that special case we keep the m and
g structs so that the rest of the panic code can use them.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/46530
From-SVN: r249611
The kickoff function for g0 can be invoked without a p, for example
from mcall(exitsyscall0) in exitsyscall after exitsyscall has cleared
the p field. The assignment gp.param = nil will invoke a write barrier.
If gp.param is not already nil, this will require a p. Avoid the problem
for a specific case that is known to be OK: when the value in gp.param
is a *g.
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/46512
From-SVN: r249595