Update dependencies
This commit is contained in:
242
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/doc.go
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vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/doc.go
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// Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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/*
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Package packages loads Go packages for inspection and analysis.
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The [Load] function takes as input a list of patterns and returns a
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list of [Package] values describing individual packages matched by those
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patterns.
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A [Config] specifies configuration options, the most important of which is
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the [LoadMode], which controls the amount of detail in the loaded packages.
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Load passes most patterns directly to the underlying build tool.
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The default build tool is the go command.
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Its supported patterns are described at
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https://pkg.go.dev/cmd/go#hdr-Package_lists_and_patterns.
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Other build systems may be supported by providing a "driver";
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see [The driver protocol].
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All patterns with the prefix "query=", where query is a
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non-empty string of letters from [a-z], are reserved and may be
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interpreted as query operators.
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Two query operators are currently supported: "file" and "pattern".
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The query "file=path/to/file.go" matches the package or packages enclosing
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the Go source file path/to/file.go. For example "file=~/go/src/fmt/print.go"
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might return the packages "fmt" and "fmt [fmt.test]".
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The query "pattern=string" causes "string" to be passed directly to
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the underlying build tool. In most cases this is unnecessary,
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but an application can use Load("pattern=" + x) as an escaping mechanism
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to ensure that x is not interpreted as a query operator if it contains '='.
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All other query operators are reserved for future use and currently
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cause Load to report an error.
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The Package struct provides basic information about the package, including
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- ID, a unique identifier for the package in the returned set;
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- GoFiles, the names of the package's Go source files;
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- Imports, a map from source import strings to the Packages they name;
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- Types, the type information for the package's exported symbols;
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- Syntax, the parsed syntax trees for the package's source code; and
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- TypesInfo, the result of a complete type-check of the package syntax trees.
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(See the documentation for type Package for the complete list of fields
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and more detailed descriptions.)
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For example,
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Load(nil, "bytes", "unicode...")
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returns four Package structs describing the standard library packages
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bytes, unicode, unicode/utf16, and unicode/utf8. Note that one pattern
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can match multiple packages and that a package might be matched by
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multiple patterns: in general it is not possible to determine which
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packages correspond to which patterns.
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Note that the list returned by Load contains only the packages matched
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by the patterns. Their dependencies can be found by walking the import
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graph using the Imports fields.
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The Load function can be configured by passing a pointer to a Config as
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the first argument. A nil Config is equivalent to the zero Config, which
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causes Load to run in LoadFiles mode, collecting minimal information.
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See the documentation for type Config for details.
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As noted earlier, the Config.Mode controls the amount of detail
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reported about the loaded packages. See the documentation for type LoadMode
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for details.
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Most tools should pass their command-line arguments (after any flags)
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uninterpreted to [Load], so that it can interpret them
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according to the conventions of the underlying build system.
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See the Example function for typical usage.
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# The driver protocol
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[Load] may be used to load Go packages even in Go projects that use
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alternative build systems, by installing an appropriate "driver"
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program for the build system and specifying its location in the
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GOPACKAGESDRIVER environment variable.
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For example,
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https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_go/wiki/Editor-and-tool-integration
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explains how to use the driver for Bazel.
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The driver program is responsible for interpreting patterns in its
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preferred notation and reporting information about the packages that
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those patterns identify. Drivers must also support the special "file="
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and "pattern=" patterns described above.
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|
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The patterns are provided as positional command-line arguments. A
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JSON-encoded [DriverRequest] message providing additional information
|
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is written to the driver's standard input. The driver must write a
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JSON-encoded [DriverResponse] message to its standard output. (This
|
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message differs from the JSON schema produced by 'go list'.)
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*/
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package packages // import "golang.org/x/tools/go/packages"
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/*
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Motivation and design considerations
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The new package's design solves problems addressed by two existing
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packages: go/build, which locates and describes packages, and
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golang.org/x/tools/go/loader, which loads, parses and type-checks them.
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The go/build.Package structure encodes too much of the 'go build' way
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of organizing projects, leaving us in need of a data type that describes a
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package of Go source code independent of the underlying build system.
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We wanted something that works equally well with go build and vgo, and
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also other build systems such as Bazel and Blaze, making it possible to
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construct analysis tools that work in all these environments.
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Tools such as errcheck and staticcheck were essentially unavailable to
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the Go community at Google, and some of Google's internal tools for Go
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are unavailable externally.
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This new package provides a uniform way to obtain package metadata by
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querying each of these build systems, optionally supporting their
|
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preferred command-line notations for packages, so that tools integrate
|
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neatly with users' build environments. The Metadata query function
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executes an external query tool appropriate to the current workspace.
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Loading packages always returns the complete import graph "all the way down",
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even if all you want is information about a single package, because the query
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mechanisms of all the build systems we currently support ({go,vgo} list, and
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blaze/bazel aspect-based query) cannot provide detailed information
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about one package without visiting all its dependencies too, so there is
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no additional asymptotic cost to providing transitive information.
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(This property might not be true of a hypothetical 5th build system.)
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In calls to TypeCheck, all initial packages, and any package that
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transitively depends on one of them, must be loaded from source.
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Consider A->B->C->D->E: if A,C are initial, A,B,C must be loaded from
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source; D may be loaded from export data, and E may not be loaded at all
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(though it's possible that D's export data mentions it, so a
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types.Package may be created for it and exposed.)
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The old loader had a feature to suppress type-checking of function
|
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bodies on a per-package basis, primarily intended to reduce the work of
|
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obtaining type information for imported packages. Now that imports are
|
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satisfied by export data, the optimization no longer seems necessary.
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Despite some early attempts, the old loader did not exploit export data,
|
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instead always using the equivalent of WholeProgram mode. This was due
|
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to the complexity of mixing source and export data packages (now
|
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resolved by the upward traversal mentioned above), and because export data
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files were nearly always missing or stale. Now that 'go build' supports
|
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caching, all the underlying build systems can guarantee to produce
|
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export data in a reasonable (amortized) time.
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|
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Test "main" packages synthesized by the build system are now reported as
|
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first-class packages, avoiding the need for clients (such as go/ssa) to
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reinvent this generation logic.
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One way in which go/packages is simpler than the old loader is in its
|
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treatment of in-package tests. In-package tests are packages that
|
||||
consist of all the files of the library under test, plus the test files.
|
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The old loader constructed in-package tests by a two-phase process of
|
||||
mutation called "augmentation": first it would construct and type check
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||||
all the ordinary library packages and type-check the packages that
|
||||
depend on them; then it would add more (test) files to the package and
|
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type-check again. This two-phase approach had four major problems:
|
||||
1) in processing the tests, the loader modified the library package,
|
||||
leaving no way for a client application to see both the test
|
||||
package and the library package; one would mutate into the other.
|
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2) because test files can declare additional methods on types defined in
|
||||
the library portion of the package, the dispatch of method calls in
|
||||
the library portion was affected by the presence of the test files.
|
||||
This should have been a clue that the packages were logically
|
||||
different.
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||||
3) this model of "augmentation" assumed at most one in-package test
|
||||
per library package, which is true of projects using 'go build',
|
||||
but not other build systems.
|
||||
4) because of the two-phase nature of test processing, all packages that
|
||||
import the library package had to be processed before augmentation,
|
||||
forcing a "one-shot" API and preventing the client from calling Load
|
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in several times in sequence as is now possible in WholeProgram mode.
|
||||
(TypeCheck mode has a similar one-shot restriction for a different reason.)
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|
||||
Early drafts of this package supported "multi-shot" operation.
|
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Although it allowed clients to make a sequence of calls (or concurrent
|
||||
calls) to Load, building up the graph of Packages incrementally,
|
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it was of marginal value: it complicated the API
|
||||
(since it allowed some options to vary across calls but not others),
|
||||
it complicated the implementation,
|
||||
it cannot be made to work in Types mode, as explained above,
|
||||
and it was less efficient than making one combined call (when this is possible).
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||||
Among the clients we have inspected, none made multiple calls to load
|
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but could not be easily and satisfactorily modified to make only a single call.
|
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However, applications changes may be required.
|
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For example, the ssadump command loads the user-specified packages
|
||||
and in addition the runtime package. It is tempting to simply append
|
||||
"runtime" to the user-provided list, but that does not work if the user
|
||||
specified an ad-hoc package such as [a.go b.go].
|
||||
Instead, ssadump no longer requests the runtime package,
|
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but seeks it among the dependencies of the user-specified packages,
|
||||
and emits an error if it is not found.
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|
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Questions & Tasks
|
||||
|
||||
- Add GOARCH/GOOS?
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||||
They are not portable concepts, but could be made portable.
|
||||
Our goal has been to allow users to express themselves using the conventions
|
||||
of the underlying build system: if the build system honors GOARCH
|
||||
during a build and during a metadata query, then so should
|
||||
applications built atop that query mechanism.
|
||||
Conversely, if the target architecture of the build is determined by
|
||||
command-line flags, the application can pass the relevant
|
||||
flags through to the build system using a command such as:
|
||||
myapp -query_flag="--cpu=amd64" -query_flag="--os=darwin"
|
||||
However, this approach is low-level, unwieldy, and non-portable.
|
||||
GOOS and GOARCH seem important enough to warrant a dedicated option.
|
||||
|
||||
- How should we handle partial failures such as a mixture of good and
|
||||
malformed patterns, existing and non-existent packages, successful and
|
||||
failed builds, import failures, import cycles, and so on, in a call to
|
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Load?
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||||
|
||||
- Support bazel, blaze, and go1.10 list, not just go1.11 list.
|
||||
|
||||
- Handle (and test) various partial success cases, e.g.
|
||||
a mixture of good packages and:
|
||||
invalid patterns
|
||||
nonexistent packages
|
||||
empty packages
|
||||
packages with malformed package or import declarations
|
||||
unreadable files
|
||||
import cycles
|
||||
other parse errors
|
||||
type errors
|
||||
Make sure we record errors at the correct place in the graph.
|
||||
|
||||
- Missing packages among initial arguments are not reported.
|
||||
Return bogus packages for them, like golist does.
|
||||
|
||||
- "undeclared name" errors (for example) are reported out of source file
|
||||
order. I suspect this is due to the breadth-first resolution now used
|
||||
by go/types. Is that a bug? Discuss with gri.
|
||||
|
||||
*/
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156
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/external.go
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156
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/external.go
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// Copyright 2018 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 packages
|
||||
|
||||
// This file defines the protocol that enables an external "driver"
|
||||
// tool to supply package metadata in place of 'go list'.
|
||||
|
||||
import (
|
||||
"bytes"
|
||||
"encoding/json"
|
||||
"fmt"
|
||||
"os"
|
||||
"os/exec"
|
||||
"strings"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
// DriverRequest defines the schema of a request for package metadata
|
||||
// from an external driver program. The JSON-encoded DriverRequest
|
||||
// message is provided to the driver program's standard input. The
|
||||
// query patterns are provided as command-line arguments.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// See the package documentation for an overview.
|
||||
type DriverRequest struct {
|
||||
Mode LoadMode `json:"mode"`
|
||||
|
||||
// Env specifies the environment the underlying build system should be run in.
|
||||
Env []string `json:"env"`
|
||||
|
||||
// BuildFlags are flags that should be passed to the underlying build system.
|
||||
BuildFlags []string `json:"build_flags"`
|
||||
|
||||
// Tests specifies whether the patterns should also return test packages.
|
||||
Tests bool `json:"tests"`
|
||||
|
||||
// Overlay maps file paths (relative to the driver's working directory)
|
||||
// to the contents of overlay files (see Config.Overlay).
|
||||
Overlay map[string][]byte `json:"overlay"`
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// DriverResponse defines the schema of a response from an external
|
||||
// driver program, providing the results of a query for package
|
||||
// metadata. The driver program must write a JSON-encoded
|
||||
// DriverResponse message to its standard output.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// See the package documentation for an overview.
|
||||
type DriverResponse struct {
|
||||
// NotHandled is returned if the request can't be handled by the current
|
||||
// driver. If an external driver returns a response with NotHandled, the
|
||||
// rest of the DriverResponse is ignored, and go/packages will fallback
|
||||
// to the next driver. If go/packages is extended in the future to support
|
||||
// lists of multiple drivers, go/packages will fall back to the next driver.
|
||||
NotHandled bool
|
||||
|
||||
// Compiler and Arch are the arguments pass of types.SizesFor
|
||||
// to get a types.Sizes to use when type checking.
|
||||
Compiler string
|
||||
Arch string
|
||||
|
||||
// Roots is the set of package IDs that make up the root packages.
|
||||
// We have to encode this separately because when we encode a single package
|
||||
// we cannot know if it is one of the roots as that requires knowledge of the
|
||||
// graph it is part of.
|
||||
Roots []string `json:",omitempty"`
|
||||
|
||||
// Packages is the full set of packages in the graph.
|
||||
// The packages are not connected into a graph.
|
||||
// The Imports if populated will be stubs that only have their ID set.
|
||||
// Imports will be connected and then type and syntax information added in a
|
||||
// later pass (see refine).
|
||||
Packages []*Package
|
||||
|
||||
// GoVersion is the minor version number used by the driver
|
||||
// (e.g. the go command on the PATH) when selecting .go files.
|
||||
// Zero means unknown.
|
||||
GoVersion int
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// driver is the type for functions that query the build system for the
|
||||
// packages named by the patterns.
|
||||
type driver func(cfg *Config, patterns ...string) (*DriverResponse, error)
|
||||
|
||||
// findExternalDriver returns the file path of a tool that supplies
|
||||
// the build system package structure, or "" if not found."
|
||||
// If GOPACKAGESDRIVER is set in the environment findExternalTool returns its
|
||||
// value, otherwise it searches for a binary named gopackagesdriver on the PATH.
|
||||
func findExternalDriver(cfg *Config) driver {
|
||||
const toolPrefix = "GOPACKAGESDRIVER="
|
||||
tool := ""
|
||||
for _, env := range cfg.Env {
|
||||
if val := strings.TrimPrefix(env, toolPrefix); val != env {
|
||||
tool = val
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
if tool != "" && tool == "off" {
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
if tool == "" {
|
||||
var err error
|
||||
tool, err = exec.LookPath("gopackagesdriver")
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
return func(cfg *Config, words ...string) (*DriverResponse, error) {
|
||||
req, err := json.Marshal(DriverRequest{
|
||||
Mode: cfg.Mode,
|
||||
Env: cfg.Env,
|
||||
BuildFlags: cfg.BuildFlags,
|
||||
Tests: cfg.Tests,
|
||||
Overlay: cfg.Overlay,
|
||||
})
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to encode message to driver tool: %v", err)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
|
||||
stderr := new(bytes.Buffer)
|
||||
cmd := exec.CommandContext(cfg.Context, tool, words...)
|
||||
cmd.Dir = cfg.Dir
|
||||
// The cwd gets resolved to the real path. On Darwin, where
|
||||
// /tmp is a symlink, this breaks anything that expects the
|
||||
// working directory to keep the original path, including the
|
||||
// go command when dealing with modules.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// os.Getwd stdlib has a special feature where if the
|
||||
// cwd and the PWD are the same node then it trusts
|
||||
// the PWD, so by setting it in the env for the child
|
||||
// process we fix up all the paths returned by the go
|
||||
// command.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// (See similar trick in Invocation.run in ../../internal/gocommand/invoke.go)
|
||||
cmd.Env = append(slicesClip(cfg.Env), "PWD="+cfg.Dir)
|
||||
cmd.Stdin = bytes.NewReader(req)
|
||||
cmd.Stdout = buf
|
||||
cmd.Stderr = stderr
|
||||
|
||||
if err := cmd.Run(); err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("%v: %v: %s", tool, err, cmd.Stderr)
|
||||
}
|
||||
if len(stderr.Bytes()) != 0 && os.Getenv("GOPACKAGESPRINTDRIVERERRORS") != "" {
|
||||
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "%s stderr: <<%s>>\n", cmdDebugStr(cmd), stderr)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
var response DriverResponse
|
||||
if err := json.Unmarshal(buf.Bytes(), &response); err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, err
|
||||
}
|
||||
return &response, nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// slicesClip removes unused capacity from the slice, returning s[:len(s):len(s)].
|
||||
// TODO(adonovan): use go1.21 slices.Clip.
|
||||
func slicesClip[S ~[]E, E any](s S) S { return s[:len(s):len(s)] }
|
||||
1066
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/golist.go
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vendored
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1066
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/golist.go
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File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load Diff
83
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/golist_overlay.go
generated
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83
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/golist_overlay.go
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@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
|
||||
// Copyright 2018 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 packages
|
||||
|
||||
import (
|
||||
"encoding/json"
|
||||
"path/filepath"
|
||||
|
||||
"golang.org/x/tools/internal/gocommand"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
// determineRootDirs returns a mapping from absolute directories that could
|
||||
// contain code to their corresponding import path prefixes.
|
||||
func (state *golistState) determineRootDirs() (map[string]string, error) {
|
||||
env, err := state.getEnv()
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, err
|
||||
}
|
||||
if env["GOMOD"] != "" {
|
||||
state.rootsOnce.Do(func() {
|
||||
state.rootDirs, state.rootDirsError = state.determineRootDirsModules()
|
||||
})
|
||||
} else {
|
||||
state.rootsOnce.Do(func() {
|
||||
state.rootDirs, state.rootDirsError = state.determineRootDirsGOPATH()
|
||||
})
|
||||
}
|
||||
return state.rootDirs, state.rootDirsError
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
func (state *golistState) determineRootDirsModules() (map[string]string, error) {
|
||||
// List all of the modules--the first will be the directory for the main
|
||||
// module. Any replaced modules will also need to be treated as roots.
|
||||
// Editing files in the module cache isn't a great idea, so we don't
|
||||
// plan to ever support that.
|
||||
out, err := state.invokeGo("list", "-m", "-json", "all")
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
// 'go list all' will fail if we're outside of a module and
|
||||
// GO111MODULE=on. Try falling back without 'all'.
|
||||
var innerErr error
|
||||
out, innerErr = state.invokeGo("list", "-m", "-json")
|
||||
if innerErr != nil {
|
||||
return nil, err
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
roots := map[string]string{}
|
||||
modules := map[string]string{}
|
||||
var i int
|
||||
for dec := json.NewDecoder(out); dec.More(); {
|
||||
mod := new(gocommand.ModuleJSON)
|
||||
if err := dec.Decode(mod); err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, err
|
||||
}
|
||||
if mod.Dir != "" && mod.Path != "" {
|
||||
// This is a valid module; add it to the map.
|
||||
absDir, err := filepath.Abs(mod.Dir)
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, err
|
||||
}
|
||||
modules[absDir] = mod.Path
|
||||
// The first result is the main module.
|
||||
if i == 0 || mod.Replace != nil && mod.Replace.Path != "" {
|
||||
roots[absDir] = mod.Path
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
i++
|
||||
}
|
||||
return roots, nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
func (state *golistState) determineRootDirsGOPATH() (map[string]string, error) {
|
||||
m := map[string]string{}
|
||||
for _, dir := range filepath.SplitList(state.mustGetEnv()["GOPATH"]) {
|
||||
absDir, err := filepath.Abs(dir)
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, err
|
||||
}
|
||||
m[filepath.Join(absDir, "src")] = ""
|
||||
}
|
||||
return m, nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
57
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/loadmode_string.go
generated
vendored
Normal file
57
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/loadmode_string.go
generated
vendored
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
|
||||
// Copyright 2019 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 packages
|
||||
|
||||
import (
|
||||
"fmt"
|
||||
"strings"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
var allModes = []LoadMode{
|
||||
NeedName,
|
||||
NeedFiles,
|
||||
NeedCompiledGoFiles,
|
||||
NeedImports,
|
||||
NeedDeps,
|
||||
NeedExportFile,
|
||||
NeedTypes,
|
||||
NeedSyntax,
|
||||
NeedTypesInfo,
|
||||
NeedTypesSizes,
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
var modeStrings = []string{
|
||||
"NeedName",
|
||||
"NeedFiles",
|
||||
"NeedCompiledGoFiles",
|
||||
"NeedImports",
|
||||
"NeedDeps",
|
||||
"NeedExportFile",
|
||||
"NeedTypes",
|
||||
"NeedSyntax",
|
||||
"NeedTypesInfo",
|
||||
"NeedTypesSizes",
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
func (mod LoadMode) String() string {
|
||||
m := mod
|
||||
if m == 0 {
|
||||
return "LoadMode(0)"
|
||||
}
|
||||
var out []string
|
||||
for i, x := range allModes {
|
||||
if x > m {
|
||||
break
|
||||
}
|
||||
if (m & x) != 0 {
|
||||
out = append(out, modeStrings[i])
|
||||
m = m ^ x
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
if m != 0 {
|
||||
out = append(out, "Unknown")
|
||||
}
|
||||
return fmt.Sprintf("LoadMode(%s)", strings.Join(out, "|"))
|
||||
}
|
||||
1510
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/packages.go
generated
vendored
Normal file
1510
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/packages.go
generated
vendored
Normal file
File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load Diff
59
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/visit.go
generated
vendored
Normal file
59
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/packages/visit.go
generated
vendored
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
|
||||
// Copyright 2018 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 packages
|
||||
|
||||
import (
|
||||
"fmt"
|
||||
"os"
|
||||
"sort"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
// Visit visits all the packages in the import graph whose roots are
|
||||
// pkgs, calling the optional pre function the first time each package
|
||||
// is encountered (preorder), and the optional post function after a
|
||||
// package's dependencies have been visited (postorder).
|
||||
// The boolean result of pre(pkg) determines whether
|
||||
// the imports of package pkg are visited.
|
||||
func Visit(pkgs []*Package, pre func(*Package) bool, post func(*Package)) {
|
||||
seen := make(map[*Package]bool)
|
||||
var visit func(*Package)
|
||||
visit = func(pkg *Package) {
|
||||
if !seen[pkg] {
|
||||
seen[pkg] = true
|
||||
|
||||
if pre == nil || pre(pkg) {
|
||||
paths := make([]string, 0, len(pkg.Imports))
|
||||
for path := range pkg.Imports {
|
||||
paths = append(paths, path)
|
||||
}
|
||||
sort.Strings(paths) // Imports is a map, this makes visit stable
|
||||
for _, path := range paths {
|
||||
visit(pkg.Imports[path])
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
if post != nil {
|
||||
post(pkg)
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
for _, pkg := range pkgs {
|
||||
visit(pkg)
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// PrintErrors prints to os.Stderr the accumulated errors of all
|
||||
// packages in the import graph rooted at pkgs, dependencies first.
|
||||
// PrintErrors returns the number of errors printed.
|
||||
func PrintErrors(pkgs []*Package) int {
|
||||
var n int
|
||||
Visit(pkgs, nil, func(pkg *Package) {
|
||||
for _, err := range pkg.Errors {
|
||||
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
|
||||
n++
|
||||
}
|
||||
})
|
||||
return n
|
||||
}
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user