We were handling the case where an OFUNCINST node was used as a function
value, but not the case when an OFUNCINST node was used as a method
value. In the case of a method value, we need to create a new selector
expression that references the newly stenciled method.
To make this work, also needed small fix to noder2 code to properly set the
Sel of a method SelectorExpr (should be just the base method name, not
the full method name including the type string). This has to be correct,
so that the function created by MethodValueWrapper() can be typechecked
successfully.
Fixes#45817
Change-Id: I7343e8a0d35fc46b44dfe4d45b77997ba6c8733e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/319589
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
Now that we are no longer calling the old typechecker at all during the
noder2 pass, we don't need to create and set an Ntype node ((which is
just a node representation of the type which we already know) for the
Name and Closure nodes. This should reduce memory usage a bit for -G=3.
Change-Id: I6b1345007ce067a89ee64955a53f25645c303f4d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/308909
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Create transformCompLit, which does the transformations done by
tcCompLit without the typechecking. This removes the final use of the
old typechecker in the noder2 pass.
Other changes:
- Used the transformCompLit in stringstorunelit(), which creates an
OCOMPLIT that needs transformation as well.
- Fixed one place in transformIndex where we were still using
typecheck.AssignConv, when we should be using its equivalent
noder.assignconvfn.
The go/test tests always run with -G=3, and I also tested that the "go
test" tests continue to run correctly with -G=3.
Change-Id: I4a976534ab7311cf2a5f43841026dbf7401e62b6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/308529
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Handle the case where types can be partially inferred for an
instantiated function that is not immediately called. The key for the
Inferred map is the CallExpr (if inferring types required the function
arguments) or the IndexExpr (if types could be inferred without the
function arguments).
Added new tests for the case where the function isn't immediately called
to typelist.go.
Change-Id: I60f503ad67cd192da2f2002060229efd4930dc39
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/305909
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Fix various small bugs related to delaying transformations due to type
params. Most of these relate to the need to delay a transformation when
an argument of an expression or statement has a type parameter that has
a structural constraint. The structural constraint implies the operation
should work, but the transformation can't happen until the actual value
of the type parameter is known.
- delay transformations for send statements and return statements if
any args/values have type params.
- similarly, delay transformation of a call where the function arg has
type parameters. This is mainly important for the case where the
function arg is a pure type parameter, but has a structural
constraint that requires it to be a function. Move the setting of
n.Use to transformCall(), since we may not know how many return
values there are until then, if the function arg is a type parameter.
- set the type of unary expressions from the type2 type (as we do with
most other expressions), since that works better with expressions
with type params.
- deal with these delayed transformations in subster.node() and convert
the CALL checks to a switch statement.
- make sure ir.CurFunc is set properly during stenciling, including
closures (needed for transforming return statements during
stenciling).
New test file typelist.go with tests for these cases.
Change-Id: I1b82f949d8cec47d906429209e846f4ebc8ec85e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/305729
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We can now use transformAssign.
The only remaining typechecker calls in the noder2 pass are for
CompLitExpr nodes (OCOMPLIT).
Change-Id: I25671c79cc30749767bb16f84e9f151b943eccd1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/305509
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For additions, compares, and slices, create transform functions that do
just the transformations for those nodes by the typecheck package (given
that the code has been fully typechecked by types2). For nodes that have
no args with typeparams, we call these transform functions directly in
noder2. But for nodes that have args with typeparams, we have to delay
and call the tranform functions during stenciling, since we don't know
the specific types involved.
We indicate that a node still needs transformation by setting Typecheck
to a new value 3. This value means the current type of the node has been
set (via types2), but the node may still need transformation.
Had to export typcheck.IsCmp and typecheck.Assignop from the typecheck
package.
Added new tests list2.go (required delaying compare typecheck/transform
because of != compare in checkList) and adder.go (requires delaying add
typecheck/transform, since it can do addition for numbers or strings).
There are several more transformation functions needed for expressions
(indexing, calls, etc.) and several more complicated ones needed for
statements (mainly various kinds of assignments).
Change-Id: I7d89d13a4108308ea0304a4b815ab60b40c59b0a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/303091
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Remove unneeded calls to typecheck in noder2 associated with g.use() and
g.obj(). These routines are already setting the types2-derived type
correctly for ONAME nodes, and there is no typechecker1-related
transformations related to ONAME nodes, other than making sure that
newly created closure variables have their type set.
Tested through normal -G=3 testing in all.bash (all of go/tests).
Change-Id: I1b790ab9948959685fca3a768401458201833671
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/303029
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For Builtin ops, we currently stay with using the old
typechecker to transform the call to a more specific expression
and possibly use more specific ops. However, for a bunch of the
ops, we delay calling the old typechecker if any of the args have
type params, for a variety of reasons.
In the near future, we will start creating separate functions that do
the same transformations as the old typechecker for calls, builtins,
indexing, comparisons, etc. These functions can then be called at noder
time for nodes with no type params, and at stenciling time for nodes
with type params.
Remove unnecessary calls to types1 typechecker for most kinds of
statements (still need it for SendStmt, AssignStmt, ReturnStmt, and
SelectStmt). In particular, we don't need it for RangeStmt, and this
avoids some complaints by the types1 typechecker on generic code.
Other small changes:
- Fix check on whether to delay calling types1-typechecker on type
conversions. Should check if HasTParam is true, rather than if the
type is directly a TYPEPARAM.
- Don't call types1-typechecker on an indexing operation if the left
operand has a typeparam in its type and is not obviously a TMAP,
TSLICE, or TARRAY. As above, we will eventually have to create a new
function that can do the required transformations (for complicated
cases) at noder time or stenciling time.
- Copy n.BuiltinOp in subster.node()
- The complex arithmetic example in absdiff.go now works.
- Added new tests double.go and append.go
- Added new example with a new() call in settable.go
Change-Id: I8f377afb6126cab1826bd3c2732aa8cdf1f7e0b4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/301951
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Simple change to avoid calling the old typechecker in noder.Addr(). This
fixes cases where generic code calls a pointer method with a non-pointer
receiver.
Added test typeparam/lockable.go that now works with this change.
For lockable.go to work, also fix incorrect check to decide whether to
translate an OXDOT now or later. We should delay translating an OXDOT
until instantiation (because we don't know how embedding, etc. will
work) if the receiver has any typeparam, not just if the receiver type
is a simple typeparam. We also have to handle OXDOT for now in
IsAddressable(), until we can remove calls to the old typechecker in
(*irgen).funcBody().
Change-Id: I77ee5efcef9a8f6c7133564106a32437e36ba4bb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/300990
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In the case of partially inferred type arguments, we need to use the
IndexExpr as the key in g.info.Inferred[] rather than the CallExpr.
Added an extra fromStrings1 call in the settable.go test that tests
partially inferred type arguments. This new call uses a new concrete
type SettableString as well.
I also added another implementation fromStrings3 (derived from a go2go
tests) that typechecks but intentionally causes a panic.
Change-Id: I74d35c5a741f72f37160a96fbec939451157f392
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/300309
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Previously, we would sometimes see an internal (*instance) type for a
receiver of a types2 method, which was a bug. To deal with that, we put
in an extra (*Selection).TArgs() method. However, that (*instance) type
is no longer showing up for receivers, so we can remove the types2
method we added and do the work with existing types2 API methods.
Change-Id: I03e68f5bbaaf82fe706b6efecbb02e951bbd3cd4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298869
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- Deal with closures in generic functions by fixing the stenciling code
- Deal with instantiated function values (instantiated generic
functions that are not immediately called) during stenciling. This
requires changing the OFUNCINST node to an ONAME node for the
appropriately instantiated function. We do this in a second pass,
since this is uncommon, but requires editing the tree at multiple
levels.
- Check global assignments (as well as functions) for generic function
instantiations.
- Fix a bug in (*subst).typ where a generic type in a generic function
may definitely not use all the type args of the function, so we need
to translate the rparams of the type based on the tparams/targs of
the function.
- Added new test combine.go that tests out closures in generic
functions and instantiated function values.
- Added one new variant to the settable test.
- Enabling inlining functions with closures for -G=3. (For now, set
Ntype on closures in -G=3 mode to keep compatibility with later parts
of compiler, and allow inlining of functions with closures.)
Change-Id: Iea63d5704c322e42e2f750a83adc8b44f911d4ec
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/296269
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
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Change-Id: I4dcaca1f2e67ee32f70c22b2efa586232ca519bb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/293958
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A type may now have a type param in it, either because it has been
composed from a function type param, or it has been declared as or
derived from a reference to a generic type. No objects or types with
type params can be exported yet. No generic type has a runtime
descriptor (but will likely eventually be associated with a dictionary).
types.Type now has an RParam field, which for a Named type can specify
the type params (in order) that must be supplied to fully instantiate
the type. Also, there is a new flag HasTParam to indicate if there is
a type param (TTYPEPARAM) anywhere in the type.
An instantiated generic type (whether fully instantiated or
re-instantiated to new type params) is a defined type, even though there
was no explicit declaration. This allows us to handle recursive
instantiated types (and improves printing of types).
To avoid the need to transform later in the compiler, an instantiation
of a method of a generic type is immediately represented as a function
with the method as the first argument.
Added 5 tests on generic types to test/typeparams, including list.go,
which tests recursive generic types.
Change-Id: Ib7ff27abd369a06d1c8ea84edc6ca1fd74bbb7c2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/292652
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- Have to delay the extra transformation on methods invoked on a type
param, since the actual transformation (including path through
embedded fields) will depend on the instantiated type. I am currently
doing the transformation during the stencil substitution phase. We
probably should have a separate pass after noder2 and stenciling,
which drives the extra transformations that were in the old
typechecker.
- We handle method values (that are not called) and method calls. We
don't currently handle method expressions.
- Handle type substitution in function types, which is needed for
function args in generic functions.
- Added stringer.go and map.go tests, testing the above changes
(including constraints with embedded interfaces).
Change-Id: I3831a937d2b8814150f75bebf9f23ab10b93fa00
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/290550
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Create an extra OFUNCINST node as needed, if there are inferred type
arguments for a generic function call.
Change-Id: Id990c5bcbce2893377072a7e41c7c6785d1eab60
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/288952
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Expresses things more clearly, especially in cases like 'f := min[int]'
where we create a xsgeneric function instantiation, but don't immediately
call it.
min[int](2, 3) now looks like:
. CALLFUNC tc(1) Use:1 int # min1.go:11 int
. . FUNCINST tc(1) FUNC-func(int, int) int # min1.go:11 FUNC-func(int, int) int
. . . NAME-main.min tc(1) Class:PFUNC Offset:0 Used FUNC-func[T](T, T) T # min1.go:3
. . FUNCINST-Targs
. . . TYPE .int Offset:0 type int
. CALLFUNC-Args
. . LITERAL-2 tc(1) int # min1.go:11
. . LITERAL-3 tc(1) int # min1.go:11
Remove the targs parameter from ir.NewCallExpr(), not needed anymore,
since type arguments are included in the FUNCINST.
Change-Id: I23438b75288330475294d7ace239ba64acfa641e
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Will now run "go tool compile -G=2 -W=2" on a simple generic function
with multiple type parameters and a call to that function with multiple
explicit type arguments.
We will likely move to have a separate function/type instantiation node,
in order distinguish these cases from normal index expressions.
Change-Id: I0a571902d63785cc06240ed4ba0495923403b511
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/288433
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Will now run "go tool compile -G=2 -W=2" on a simple generic function
with one type parameter and a call to that function with one explicit
type argument. Next change will handle multiple type arguments.
Change-Id: Ia7d17ea2a02bf99bd50e673ac80ae4aad4c48440
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The recent refactoring of SelectorExpr code to helpers broke the
handling of MethodExprs when there is an embedded field involved (e.g.
test/method7.go, line 48). If there is an embedded field involved, the
node op seen in DotMethod() is an ODOT rather than an OTYPE. Also, the
receiver type of the result should be the original type, but the new
code was using the last type after following the embedding path.
Change-Id: I13f7ea6448b03d3e8f974103ee3a027219ca8388
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/286176
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This CL refactors the SelectorExpr-handling code added in CL 285373
into helper functions that can eventually be reused by iimport.
Change-Id: I15b4a96c242f63cb370d7492ed08168550724f47
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By using the types2 Selection information, we can create ODOT, ODOTPTR,
OCALLPART, ODOTMETH, ODOTINTER, and OMETHEXPR nodes directly in noder,
so we don't have to do that functionality in typecheck.go. Intermediate
nodes are created as needed for embedded fields. Don't have to typecheck
the results of g.selectorExpr(), because we set the types of all the
needed nodes.
There is one bug remaining in 'go test reflect' that will be fixed when dev.regabi is merged.
Change-Id: I4599d43197783e318610deb2f208137f9344ab63
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Represent x++/-- as x +=/-= with the RHS of the assignment being nil
rather than syntax.ImplicitOne.
Dependent code already had to check for syntax.ImplicitOne, but
then shared some existing code for regular assignment operations.
Now always handle this case fully explicit, which simplifies the
code.
Change-Id: I28c7918153c27cbbf97b041d0c85ff027c58687c
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This CL updates irgen to directly set the type for a bunch of basic
expressions that are easy to handle already. Trickier rewrites are
still handled with typecheck.Expr, but responsibility of calling that
is pushed down to the conversion of individual operations.
Change-Id: I774ac6ab4c72ad854860ab5c741867dd42a066b3
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This CL moves qualified identifier handling into expr0 with other
selector expressions, rather than as a completely separate special
case handled up front. This has a few benefits:
1. It's marginally simpler/cleaner.
2. It allows extra checking for imported objects that they have the
same type that types2 thought they had.
3. For imported, untyped constants, we now instead handle them with
the "tv.Value != nil" case. In particular, this ensures that they've
always already been coerced to the appropriate concrete type by
types2.
Change-Id: Ibf44ae6901db36aa5251f70934616e9fcbd1cbc5
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This CL adds "irgen", a new noding implementation that utilizes types2
to guide IR construction. Notably, it completely skips dealing with
constant and type expressions (aside from using ir.TypeNode to
interoperate with the types1 typechecker), because types2 already
handled those. It also omits any syntax checking, trusting that types2
already rejected any errors.
It currently still utilizes the types1 typechecker for the desugaring
operations it handles (e.g., turning OAS2 into OAS2FUNC/etc, inserting
implicit conversions, rewriting f(g()) functions, and so on). However,
the IR is constructed in a fully incremental fashion, so it should be
easy to now piecemeal replace those dependencies as needed.
Nearly all of "go test std cmd" passes with -G=3 enabled by
default. The main remaining blocker is the number of test/run.go
failures. There also appear to be cases where types2 does not provide
us with position information. These will be iterated upon.
Portions and ideas from Dan Scales's CL 276653.
Change-Id: Ic99e8f2d0267b0312d30c10d5d043f5817a59c9d
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