| // errorcheck -0 -N -m -l | 
 |  | 
 | // Copyright 2016 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. | 
 |  | 
 | // The escape analyzer needs to run till its root set settles | 
 | // (this is not that often, it turns out). | 
 | // This test is likely to become stale because the leak depends | 
 | // on a spurious-escape bug -- return an interface as a named | 
 | // output parameter appears to cause the called closure to escape, | 
 | // where returning it as a regular type does not. | 
 |  | 
 | package main | 
 |  | 
 | import ( | 
 | 	"fmt" | 
 | ) | 
 |  | 
 | type closure func(i, j int) ent | 
 |  | 
 | type ent int | 
 |  | 
 | func (e ent) String() string { | 
 | 	return fmt.Sprintf("%d", int(e)) // ERROR "... argument does not escape$" "int\(e\) escapes to heap$" | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | //go:noinline | 
 | func foo(ops closure, j int) (err fmt.Stringer) { // ERROR "ops does not escape" | 
 | 	enqueue := func(i int) fmt.Stringer { // ERROR "func literal does not escape" | 
 | 		return ops(i, j) // ERROR "ops\(i, j\) escapes to heap$" | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	err = enqueue(4) | 
 | 	if err != nil { | 
 | 		return err | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return // return result of enqueue, a fmt.Stringer | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func main() { | 
 | 	// 3 identical functions, to get different escape behavior. | 
 | 	f := func(i, j int) ent { // ERROR "func literal does not escape" | 
 | 		return ent(i + j) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	i := foo(f, 3).(ent) | 
 | 	fmt.Printf("foo(f,3)=%d\n", int(i)) // ERROR "int\(i\) escapes to heap$" "... argument does not escape$" | 
 | } |