| // Copyright 2013 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 main |
| |
| import ( |
| "bytes" |
| "encoding/json" |
| "flag" |
| "fmt" |
| "go/ast" |
| "go/parser" |
| "go/token" |
| "internal/coverage" |
| "internal/coverage/encodemeta" |
| "internal/coverage/slicewriter" |
| "io" |
| "log" |
| "os" |
| "path/filepath" |
| "sort" |
| "strconv" |
| "strings" |
| |
| "cmd/internal/edit" |
| "cmd/internal/objabi" |
| ) |
| |
| const usageMessage = "" + |
| `Usage of 'go tool cover': |
| Given a coverage profile produced by 'go test': |
| go test -coverprofile=c.out |
| |
| Open a web browser displaying annotated source code: |
| go tool cover -html=c.out |
| |
| Write out an HTML file instead of launching a web browser: |
| go tool cover -html=c.out -o coverage.html |
| |
| Display coverage percentages to stdout for each function: |
| go tool cover -func=c.out |
| |
| Finally, to generate modified source code with coverage annotations |
| for a package (what go test -cover does): |
| go tool cover -mode=set -var=CoverageVariableName \ |
| -pkgcfg=<config> -outfilelist=<file> file1.go ... fileN.go |
| |
| where -pkgcfg points to a file containing the package path, |
| package name, module path, and related info from "go build", |
| and -outfilelist points to a file containing the filenames |
| of the instrumented output files (one per input file). |
| See https://pkg.go.dev/internal/coverage#CoverPkgConfig for |
| more on the package config. |
| ` |
| |
| func usage() { |
| fmt.Fprint(os.Stderr, usageMessage) |
| fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "\nFlags:") |
| flag.PrintDefaults() |
| fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "\n Only one of -html, -func, or -mode may be set.") |
| os.Exit(2) |
| } |
| |
| var ( |
| mode = flag.String("mode", "", "coverage mode: set, count, atomic") |
| varVar = flag.String("var", "GoCover", "name of coverage variable to generate") |
| output = flag.String("o", "", "file for output") |
| outfilelist = flag.String("outfilelist", "", "file containing list of output files (one per line) if -pkgcfg is in use") |
| htmlOut = flag.String("html", "", "generate HTML representation of coverage profile") |
| funcOut = flag.String("func", "", "output coverage profile information for each function") |
| pkgcfg = flag.String("pkgcfg", "", "enable full-package instrumentation mode using params from specified config file") |
| ) |
| |
| var pkgconfig coverage.CoverPkgConfig |
| |
| var outputfiles []string // set when -pkgcfg is in use |
| |
| var profile string // The profile to read; the value of -html or -func |
| |
| var counterStmt func(*File, string) string |
| |
| const ( |
| atomicPackagePath = "sync/atomic" |
| atomicPackageName = "_cover_atomic_" |
| ) |
| |
| func main() { |
| objabi.AddVersionFlag() |
| flag.Usage = usage |
| flag.Parse() |
| |
| // Usage information when no arguments. |
| if flag.NFlag() == 0 && flag.NArg() == 0 { |
| flag.Usage() |
| } |
| |
| err := parseFlags() |
| if err != nil { |
| fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err) |
| fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, `For usage information, run "go tool cover -help"`) |
| os.Exit(2) |
| } |
| |
| // Generate coverage-annotated source. |
| if *mode != "" { |
| annotate(flag.Args()) |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // Output HTML or function coverage information. |
| if *htmlOut != "" { |
| err = htmlOutput(profile, *output) |
| } else { |
| err = funcOutput(profile, *output) |
| } |
| |
| if err != nil { |
| fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "cover: %v\n", err) |
| os.Exit(2) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // parseFlags sets the profile and counterStmt globals and performs validations. |
| func parseFlags() error { |
| profile = *htmlOut |
| if *funcOut != "" { |
| if profile != "" { |
| return fmt.Errorf("too many options") |
| } |
| profile = *funcOut |
| } |
| |
| // Must either display a profile or rewrite Go source. |
| if (profile == "") == (*mode == "") { |
| return fmt.Errorf("too many options") |
| } |
| |
| if *varVar != "" && !token.IsIdentifier(*varVar) { |
| return fmt.Errorf("-var: %q is not a valid identifier", *varVar) |
| } |
| |
| if *mode != "" { |
| switch *mode { |
| case "set": |
| counterStmt = setCounterStmt |
| case "count": |
| counterStmt = incCounterStmt |
| case "atomic": |
| counterStmt = atomicCounterStmt |
| case "regonly", "testmain": |
| counterStmt = nil |
| default: |
| return fmt.Errorf("unknown -mode %v", *mode) |
| } |
| |
| if flag.NArg() == 0 { |
| return fmt.Errorf("missing source file(s)") |
| } else { |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| if *output != "" { |
| return fmt.Errorf("please use '-outfilelist' flag instead of '-o'") |
| } |
| var err error |
| if outputfiles, err = readOutFileList(*outfilelist); err != nil { |
| return err |
| } |
| numInputs := len(flag.Args()) |
| numOutputs := len(outputfiles) |
| if numOutputs != numInputs { |
| return fmt.Errorf("number of output files (%d) not equal to number of input files (%d)", numOutputs, numInputs) |
| } |
| if err := readPackageConfig(*pkgcfg); err != nil { |
| return err |
| } |
| return nil |
| } else { |
| if *outfilelist != "" { |
| return fmt.Errorf("'-outfilelist' flag applicable only when -pkgcfg used") |
| } |
| } |
| if flag.NArg() == 1 { |
| return nil |
| } |
| } |
| } else if flag.NArg() == 0 { |
| return nil |
| } |
| return fmt.Errorf("too many arguments") |
| } |
| |
| func readOutFileList(path string) ([]string, error) { |
| data, err := os.ReadFile(path) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, fmt.Errorf("error reading -outfilelist file %q: %v", path, err) |
| } |
| return strings.Split(strings.TrimSpace(string(data)), "\n"), nil |
| } |
| |
| func readPackageConfig(path string) error { |
| data, err := os.ReadFile(path) |
| if err != nil { |
| return fmt.Errorf("error reading pkgconfig file %q: %v", path, err) |
| } |
| if err := json.Unmarshal(data, &pkgconfig); err != nil { |
| return fmt.Errorf("error reading pkgconfig file %q: %v", path, err) |
| } |
| if pkgconfig.Granularity != "perblock" && pkgconfig.Granularity != "perfunc" { |
| return fmt.Errorf(`%s: pkgconfig requires perblock/perfunc value`, path) |
| } |
| return nil |
| } |
| |
| // Block represents the information about a basic block to be recorded in the analysis. |
| // Note: Our definition of basic block is based on control structures; we don't break |
| // apart && and ||. We could but it doesn't seem important enough to bother. |
| type Block struct { |
| startByte token.Pos |
| endByte token.Pos |
| numStmt int |
| } |
| |
| // Package holds package-specific state. |
| type Package struct { |
| mdb *encodemeta.CoverageMetaDataBuilder |
| counterLengths []int |
| } |
| |
| // Function holds func-specific state. |
| type Func struct { |
| units []coverage.CoverableUnit |
| counterVar string |
| } |
| |
| // File is a wrapper for the state of a file used in the parser. |
| // The basic parse tree walker is a method of this type. |
| type File struct { |
| fset *token.FileSet |
| name string // Name of file. |
| astFile *ast.File |
| blocks []Block |
| content []byte |
| edit *edit.Buffer |
| mdb *encodemeta.CoverageMetaDataBuilder |
| fn Func |
| pkg *Package |
| } |
| |
| // findText finds text in the original source, starting at pos. |
| // It correctly skips over comments and assumes it need not |
| // handle quoted strings. |
| // It returns a byte offset within f.src. |
| func (f *File) findText(pos token.Pos, text string) int { |
| b := []byte(text) |
| start := f.offset(pos) |
| i := start |
| s := f.content |
| for i < len(s) { |
| if bytes.HasPrefix(s[i:], b) { |
| return i |
| } |
| if i+2 <= len(s) && s[i] == '/' && s[i+1] == '/' { |
| for i < len(s) && s[i] != '\n' { |
| i++ |
| } |
| continue |
| } |
| if i+2 <= len(s) && s[i] == '/' && s[i+1] == '*' { |
| for i += 2; ; i++ { |
| if i+2 > len(s) { |
| return 0 |
| } |
| if s[i] == '*' && s[i+1] == '/' { |
| i += 2 |
| break |
| } |
| } |
| continue |
| } |
| i++ |
| } |
| return -1 |
| } |
| |
| // Visit implements the ast.Visitor interface. |
| func (f *File) Visit(node ast.Node) ast.Visitor { |
| switch n := node.(type) { |
| case *ast.BlockStmt: |
| // If it's a switch or select, the body is a list of case clauses; don't tag the block itself. |
| if len(n.List) > 0 { |
| switch n.List[0].(type) { |
| case *ast.CaseClause: // switch |
| for _, n := range n.List { |
| clause := n.(*ast.CaseClause) |
| f.addCounters(clause.Colon+1, clause.Colon+1, clause.End(), clause.Body, false) |
| } |
| return f |
| case *ast.CommClause: // select |
| for _, n := range n.List { |
| clause := n.(*ast.CommClause) |
| f.addCounters(clause.Colon+1, clause.Colon+1, clause.End(), clause.Body, false) |
| } |
| return f |
| } |
| } |
| f.addCounters(n.Lbrace, n.Lbrace+1, n.Rbrace+1, n.List, true) // +1 to step past closing brace. |
| case *ast.IfStmt: |
| if n.Init != nil { |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Init) |
| } |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Cond) |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Body) |
| if n.Else == nil { |
| return nil |
| } |
| // The elses are special, because if we have |
| // if x { |
| // } else if y { |
| // } |
| // we want to cover the "if y". To do this, we need a place to drop the counter, |
| // so we add a hidden block: |
| // if x { |
| // } else { |
| // if y { |
| // } |
| // } |
| elseOffset := f.findText(n.Body.End(), "else") |
| if elseOffset < 0 { |
| panic("lost else") |
| } |
| f.edit.Insert(elseOffset+4, "{") |
| f.edit.Insert(f.offset(n.Else.End()), "}") |
| |
| // We just created a block, now walk it. |
| // Adjust the position of the new block to start after |
| // the "else". That will cause it to follow the "{" |
| // we inserted above. |
| pos := f.fset.File(n.Body.End()).Pos(elseOffset + 4) |
| switch stmt := n.Else.(type) { |
| case *ast.IfStmt: |
| block := &ast.BlockStmt{ |
| Lbrace: pos, |
| List: []ast.Stmt{stmt}, |
| Rbrace: stmt.End(), |
| } |
| n.Else = block |
| case *ast.BlockStmt: |
| stmt.Lbrace = pos |
| default: |
| panic("unexpected node type in if") |
| } |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Else) |
| return nil |
| case *ast.SelectStmt: |
| // Don't annotate an empty select - creates a syntax error. |
| if n.Body == nil || len(n.Body.List) == 0 { |
| return nil |
| } |
| case *ast.SwitchStmt: |
| // Don't annotate an empty switch - creates a syntax error. |
| if n.Body == nil || len(n.Body.List) == 0 { |
| if n.Init != nil { |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Init) |
| } |
| if n.Tag != nil { |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Tag) |
| } |
| return nil |
| } |
| case *ast.TypeSwitchStmt: |
| // Don't annotate an empty type switch - creates a syntax error. |
| if n.Body == nil || len(n.Body.List) == 0 { |
| if n.Init != nil { |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Init) |
| } |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Assign) |
| return nil |
| } |
| case *ast.FuncDecl: |
| // Don't annotate functions with blank names - they cannot be executed. |
| // Similarly for bodyless funcs. |
| if n.Name.Name == "_" || n.Body == nil { |
| return nil |
| } |
| fname := n.Name.Name |
| // Skip AddUint32 and StoreUint32 if we're instrumenting |
| // sync/atomic itself in atomic mode (out of an abundance of |
| // caution), since as part of the instrumentation process we |
| // add calls to AddUint32/StoreUint32, and we don't want to |
| // somehow create an infinite loop. |
| // |
| // Note that in the current implementation (Go 1.20) both |
| // routines are assembly stubs that forward calls to the |
| // runtime/internal/atomic equivalents, hence the infinite |
| // loop scenario is purely theoretical (maybe if in some |
| // future implementation one of these functions might be |
| // written in Go). See #57445 for more details. |
| if atomicOnAtomic() && (fname == "AddUint32" || fname == "StoreUint32") { |
| return nil |
| } |
| // Determine proper function or method name. |
| if r := n.Recv; r != nil && len(r.List) == 1 { |
| t := r.List[0].Type |
| star := "" |
| if p, _ := t.(*ast.StarExpr); p != nil { |
| t = p.X |
| star = "*" |
| } |
| if p, _ := t.(*ast.Ident); p != nil { |
| fname = star + p.Name + "." + fname |
| } |
| } |
| walkBody := true |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| f.preFunc(n, fname) |
| if pkgconfig.Granularity == "perfunc" { |
| walkBody = false |
| } |
| } |
| if walkBody { |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Body) |
| } |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| flit := false |
| f.postFunc(n, fname, flit, n.Body) |
| } |
| return nil |
| case *ast.FuncLit: |
| // For function literals enclosed in functions, just glom the |
| // code for the literal in with the enclosing function (for now). |
| if f.fn.counterVar != "" { |
| return f |
| } |
| |
| // Hack: function literals aren't named in the go/ast representation, |
| // and we don't know what name the compiler will choose. For now, |
| // just make up a descriptive name. |
| pos := n.Pos() |
| p := f.fset.File(pos).Position(pos) |
| fname := fmt.Sprintf("func.L%d.C%d", p.Line, p.Column) |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| f.preFunc(n, fname) |
| } |
| if pkgconfig.Granularity != "perfunc" { |
| ast.Walk(f, n.Body) |
| } |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| flit := true |
| f.postFunc(n, fname, flit, n.Body) |
| } |
| return nil |
| } |
| return f |
| } |
| |
| func mkCounterVarName(idx int) string { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("%s_%d", *varVar, idx) |
| } |
| |
| func mkPackageIdVar() string { |
| return *varVar + "P" |
| } |
| |
| func mkMetaVar() string { |
| return *varVar + "M" |
| } |
| |
| func mkPackageIdExpression() string { |
| ppath := pkgconfig.PkgPath |
| if hcid := coverage.HardCodedPkgID(ppath); hcid != -1 { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("uint32(%d)", uint32(hcid)) |
| } |
| return mkPackageIdVar() |
| } |
| |
| func (f *File) preFunc(fn ast.Node, fname string) { |
| f.fn.units = f.fn.units[:0] |
| |
| // create a new counter variable for this function. |
| cv := mkCounterVarName(len(f.pkg.counterLengths)) |
| f.fn.counterVar = cv |
| } |
| |
| func (f *File) postFunc(fn ast.Node, funcname string, flit bool, body *ast.BlockStmt) { |
| |
| // Tack on single counter write if we are in "perfunc" mode. |
| singleCtr := "" |
| if pkgconfig.Granularity == "perfunc" { |
| singleCtr = "; " + f.newCounter(fn.Pos(), fn.Pos(), 1) |
| } |
| |
| // record the length of the counter var required. |
| nc := len(f.fn.units) + coverage.FirstCtrOffset |
| f.pkg.counterLengths = append(f.pkg.counterLengths, nc) |
| |
| // FIXME: for windows, do we want "\" and not "/"? Need to test here. |
| // Currently filename is formed as packagepath + "/" + basename. |
| fnpos := f.fset.Position(fn.Pos()) |
| ppath := pkgconfig.PkgPath |
| filename := ppath + "/" + filepath.Base(fnpos.Filename) |
| |
| // The convention for cmd/cover is that if the go command that |
| // kicks off coverage specifies a local import path (e.g. "go test |
| // -cover ./thispackage"), the tool will capture full pathnames |
| // for source files instead of relative paths, which tend to work |
| // more smoothly for "go tool cover -html". See also issue #56433 |
| // for more details. |
| if pkgconfig.Local { |
| filename = f.name |
| } |
| |
| // Hand off function to meta-data builder. |
| fd := coverage.FuncDesc{ |
| Funcname: funcname, |
| Srcfile: filename, |
| Units: f.fn.units, |
| Lit: flit, |
| } |
| funcId := f.mdb.AddFunc(fd) |
| |
| hookWrite := func(cv string, which int, val string) string { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("%s[%d] = %s", cv, which, val) |
| } |
| if *mode == "atomic" { |
| hookWrite = func(cv string, which int, val string) string { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("%sStoreUint32(&%s[%d], %s)", |
| atomicPackagePrefix(), cv, which, val) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Generate the registration hook sequence for the function. This |
| // sequence looks like |
| // |
| // counterVar[0] = <num_units> |
| // counterVar[1] = pkgId |
| // counterVar[2] = fnId |
| // |
| cv := f.fn.counterVar |
| regHook := hookWrite(cv, 0, strconv.Itoa(len(f.fn.units))) + " ; " + |
| hookWrite(cv, 1, mkPackageIdExpression()) + " ; " + |
| hookWrite(cv, 2, strconv.Itoa(int(funcId))) + singleCtr |
| |
| // Insert the registration sequence into the function. We want this sequence to |
| // appear before any counter updates, so use a hack to ensure that this edit |
| // applies before the edit corresponding to the prolog counter update. |
| |
| boff := f.offset(body.Pos()) |
| ipos := f.fset.File(body.Pos()).Pos(boff) |
| ip := f.offset(ipos) |
| f.edit.Replace(ip, ip+1, string(f.content[ipos-1])+regHook+" ; ") |
| |
| f.fn.counterVar = "" |
| } |
| |
| func annotate(names []string) { |
| var p *Package |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| pp := pkgconfig.PkgPath |
| pn := pkgconfig.PkgName |
| mp := pkgconfig.ModulePath |
| mdb, err := encodemeta.NewCoverageMetaDataBuilder(pp, pn, mp) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("creating coverage meta-data builder: %v\n", err) |
| } |
| p = &Package{ |
| mdb: mdb, |
| } |
| } |
| // TODO: process files in parallel here if it matters. |
| for k, name := range names { |
| last := false |
| if k == len(names)-1 { |
| last = true |
| } |
| |
| fd := os.Stdout |
| isStdout := true |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| var err error |
| fd, err = os.Create(outputfiles[k]) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("cover: %s", err) |
| } |
| isStdout = false |
| } else if *output != "" { |
| var err error |
| fd, err = os.Create(*output) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("cover: %s", err) |
| } |
| isStdout = false |
| } |
| p.annotateFile(name, fd, last) |
| if !isStdout { |
| if err := fd.Close(); err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("cover: %s", err) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| func (p *Package) annotateFile(name string, fd io.Writer, last bool) { |
| fset := token.NewFileSet() |
| content, err := os.ReadFile(name) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("cover: %s: %s", name, err) |
| } |
| parsedFile, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, name, content, parser.ParseComments) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("cover: %s: %s", name, err) |
| } |
| |
| file := &File{ |
| fset: fset, |
| name: name, |
| content: content, |
| edit: edit.NewBuffer(content), |
| astFile: parsedFile, |
| } |
| if p != nil { |
| file.mdb = p.mdb |
| file.pkg = p |
| } |
| |
| if *mode == "atomic" { |
| // Add import of sync/atomic immediately after package clause. |
| // We do this even if there is an existing import, because the |
| // existing import may be shadowed at any given place we want |
| // to refer to it, and our name (_cover_atomic_) is less likely to |
| // be shadowed. The one exception is if we're visiting the |
| // sync/atomic package itself, in which case we can refer to |
| // functions directly without an import prefix. See also #57445. |
| if pkgconfig.PkgPath != "sync/atomic" { |
| file.edit.Insert(file.offset(file.astFile.Name.End()), |
| fmt.Sprintf("; import %s %q", atomicPackageName, atomicPackagePath)) |
| } |
| } |
| if pkgconfig.PkgName == "main" { |
| file.edit.Insert(file.offset(file.astFile.Name.End()), |
| "; import _ \"runtime/coverage\"") |
| } |
| |
| if counterStmt != nil { |
| ast.Walk(file, file.astFile) |
| } |
| newContent := file.edit.Bytes() |
| |
| fmt.Fprintf(fd, "//line %s:1:1\n", name) |
| fd.Write(newContent) |
| |
| // After printing the source tree, add some declarations for the |
| // counters etc. We could do this by adding to the tree, but it's |
| // easier just to print the text. |
| file.addVariables(fd) |
| |
| // Emit a reference to the atomic package to avoid |
| // import and not used error when there's no code in a file. |
| if *mode == "atomic" { |
| fmt.Fprintf(fd, "\nvar _ = %sLoadUint32\n", atomicPackagePrefix()) |
| } |
| |
| // Last file? Emit meta-data and converage config. |
| if last { |
| p.emitMetaData(fd) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // setCounterStmt returns the expression: __count[23] = 1. |
| func setCounterStmt(f *File, counter string) string { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("%s = 1", counter) |
| } |
| |
| // incCounterStmt returns the expression: __count[23]++. |
| func incCounterStmt(f *File, counter string) string { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("%s++", counter) |
| } |
| |
| // atomicCounterStmt returns the expression: atomic.AddUint32(&__count[23], 1) |
| func atomicCounterStmt(f *File, counter string) string { |
| return fmt.Sprintf("%sAddUint32(&%s, 1)", atomicPackagePrefix(), counter) |
| } |
| |
| // newCounter creates a new counter expression of the appropriate form. |
| func (f *File) newCounter(start, end token.Pos, numStmt int) string { |
| var stmt string |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| slot := len(f.fn.units) + coverage.FirstCtrOffset |
| if f.fn.counterVar == "" { |
| panic("internal error: counter var unset") |
| } |
| stmt = counterStmt(f, fmt.Sprintf("%s[%d]", f.fn.counterVar, slot)) |
| stpos := f.fset.Position(start) |
| enpos := f.fset.Position(end) |
| stpos, enpos = dedup(stpos, enpos) |
| unit := coverage.CoverableUnit{ |
| StLine: uint32(stpos.Line), |
| StCol: uint32(stpos.Column), |
| EnLine: uint32(enpos.Line), |
| EnCol: uint32(enpos.Column), |
| NxStmts: uint32(numStmt), |
| } |
| f.fn.units = append(f.fn.units, unit) |
| } else { |
| stmt = counterStmt(f, fmt.Sprintf("%s.Count[%d]", *varVar, |
| len(f.blocks))) |
| f.blocks = append(f.blocks, Block{start, end, numStmt}) |
| } |
| return stmt |
| } |
| |
| // addCounters takes a list of statements and adds counters to the beginning of |
| // each basic block at the top level of that list. For instance, given |
| // |
| // S1 |
| // if cond { |
| // S2 |
| // } |
| // S3 |
| // |
| // counters will be added before S1 and before S3. The block containing S2 |
| // will be visited in a separate call. |
| // TODO: Nested simple blocks get unnecessary (but correct) counters |
| func (f *File) addCounters(pos, insertPos, blockEnd token.Pos, list []ast.Stmt, extendToClosingBrace bool) { |
| // Special case: make sure we add a counter to an empty block. Can't do this below |
| // or we will add a counter to an empty statement list after, say, a return statement. |
| if len(list) == 0 { |
| f.edit.Insert(f.offset(insertPos), f.newCounter(insertPos, blockEnd, 0)+";") |
| return |
| } |
| // Make a copy of the list, as we may mutate it and should leave the |
| // existing list intact. |
| list = append([]ast.Stmt(nil), list...) |
| // We have a block (statement list), but it may have several basic blocks due to the |
| // appearance of statements that affect the flow of control. |
| for { |
| // Find first statement that affects flow of control (break, continue, if, etc.). |
| // It will be the last statement of this basic block. |
| var last int |
| end := blockEnd |
| for last = 0; last < len(list); last++ { |
| stmt := list[last] |
| end = f.statementBoundary(stmt) |
| if f.endsBasicSourceBlock(stmt) { |
| // If it is a labeled statement, we need to place a counter between |
| // the label and its statement because it may be the target of a goto |
| // and thus start a basic block. That is, given |
| // foo: stmt |
| // we need to create |
| // foo: ; stmt |
| // and mark the label as a block-terminating statement. |
| // The result will then be |
| // foo: COUNTER[n]++; stmt |
| // However, we can't do this if the labeled statement is already |
| // a control statement, such as a labeled for. |
| if label, isLabel := stmt.(*ast.LabeledStmt); isLabel && !f.isControl(label.Stmt) { |
| newLabel := *label |
| newLabel.Stmt = &ast.EmptyStmt{ |
| Semicolon: label.Stmt.Pos(), |
| Implicit: true, |
| } |
| end = label.Pos() // Previous block ends before the label. |
| list[last] = &newLabel |
| // Open a gap and drop in the old statement, now without a label. |
| list = append(list, nil) |
| copy(list[last+1:], list[last:]) |
| list[last+1] = label.Stmt |
| } |
| last++ |
| extendToClosingBrace = false // Block is broken up now. |
| break |
| } |
| } |
| if extendToClosingBrace { |
| end = blockEnd |
| } |
| if pos != end { // Can have no source to cover if e.g. blocks abut. |
| f.edit.Insert(f.offset(insertPos), f.newCounter(pos, end, last)+";") |
| } |
| list = list[last:] |
| if len(list) == 0 { |
| break |
| } |
| pos = list[0].Pos() |
| insertPos = pos |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // hasFuncLiteral reports the existence and position of the first func literal |
| // in the node, if any. If a func literal appears, it usually marks the termination |
| // of a basic block because the function body is itself a block. |
| // Therefore we draw a line at the start of the body of the first function literal we find. |
| // TODO: what if there's more than one? Probably doesn't matter much. |
| func hasFuncLiteral(n ast.Node) (bool, token.Pos) { |
| if n == nil { |
| return false, 0 |
| } |
| var literal funcLitFinder |
| ast.Walk(&literal, n) |
| return literal.found(), token.Pos(literal) |
| } |
| |
| // statementBoundary finds the location in s that terminates the current basic |
| // block in the source. |
| func (f *File) statementBoundary(s ast.Stmt) token.Pos { |
| // Control flow statements are easy. |
| switch s := s.(type) { |
| case *ast.BlockStmt: |
| // Treat blocks like basic blocks to avoid overlapping counters. |
| return s.Lbrace |
| case *ast.IfStmt: |
| found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Cond) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| return s.Body.Lbrace |
| case *ast.ForStmt: |
| found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Cond) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Post) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| return s.Body.Lbrace |
| case *ast.LabeledStmt: |
| return f.statementBoundary(s.Stmt) |
| case *ast.RangeStmt: |
| found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.X) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| return s.Body.Lbrace |
| case *ast.SwitchStmt: |
| found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| found, pos = hasFuncLiteral(s.Tag) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| return s.Body.Lbrace |
| case *ast.SelectStmt: |
| return s.Body.Lbrace |
| case *ast.TypeSwitchStmt: |
| found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s.Init) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| return s.Body.Lbrace |
| } |
| // If not a control flow statement, it is a declaration, expression, call, etc. and it may have a function literal. |
| // If it does, that's tricky because we want to exclude the body of the function from this block. |
| // Draw a line at the start of the body of the first function literal we find. |
| // TODO: what if there's more than one? Probably doesn't matter much. |
| found, pos := hasFuncLiteral(s) |
| if found { |
| return pos |
| } |
| return s.End() |
| } |
| |
| // endsBasicSourceBlock reports whether s changes the flow of control: break, if, etc., |
| // or if it's just problematic, for instance contains a function literal, which will complicate |
| // accounting due to the block-within-an expression. |
| func (f *File) endsBasicSourceBlock(s ast.Stmt) bool { |
| switch s := s.(type) { |
| case *ast.BlockStmt: |
| // Treat blocks like basic blocks to avoid overlapping counters. |
| return true |
| case *ast.BranchStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.ForStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.IfStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.LabeledStmt: |
| return true // A goto may branch here, starting a new basic block. |
| case *ast.RangeStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.SwitchStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.SelectStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.TypeSwitchStmt: |
| return true |
| case *ast.ExprStmt: |
| // Calls to panic change the flow. |
| // We really should verify that "panic" is the predefined function, |
| // but without type checking we can't and the likelihood of it being |
| // an actual problem is vanishingly small. |
| if call, ok := s.X.(*ast.CallExpr); ok { |
| if ident, ok := call.Fun.(*ast.Ident); ok && ident.Name == "panic" && len(call.Args) == 1 { |
| return true |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| found, _ := hasFuncLiteral(s) |
| return found |
| } |
| |
| // isControl reports whether s is a control statement that, if labeled, cannot be |
| // separated from its label. |
| func (f *File) isControl(s ast.Stmt) bool { |
| switch s.(type) { |
| case *ast.ForStmt, *ast.RangeStmt, *ast.SwitchStmt, *ast.SelectStmt, *ast.TypeSwitchStmt: |
| return true |
| } |
| return false |
| } |
| |
| // funcLitFinder implements the ast.Visitor pattern to find the location of any |
| // function literal in a subtree. |
| type funcLitFinder token.Pos |
| |
| func (f *funcLitFinder) Visit(node ast.Node) (w ast.Visitor) { |
| if f.found() { |
| return nil // Prune search. |
| } |
| switch n := node.(type) { |
| case *ast.FuncLit: |
| *f = funcLitFinder(n.Body.Lbrace) |
| return nil // Prune search. |
| } |
| return f |
| } |
| |
| func (f *funcLitFinder) found() bool { |
| return token.Pos(*f) != token.NoPos |
| } |
| |
| // Sort interface for []block1; used for self-check in addVariables. |
| |
| type block1 struct { |
| Block |
| index int |
| } |
| |
| type blockSlice []block1 |
| |
| func (b blockSlice) Len() int { return len(b) } |
| func (b blockSlice) Less(i, j int) bool { return b[i].startByte < b[j].startByte } |
| func (b blockSlice) Swap(i, j int) { b[i], b[j] = b[j], b[i] } |
| |
| // offset translates a token position into a 0-indexed byte offset. |
| func (f *File) offset(pos token.Pos) int { |
| return f.fset.Position(pos).Offset |
| } |
| |
| // addVariables adds to the end of the file the declarations to set up the counter and position variables. |
| func (f *File) addVariables(w io.Writer) { |
| if *pkgcfg != "" { |
| return |
| } |
| // Self-check: Verify that the instrumented basic blocks are disjoint. |
| t := make([]block1, len(f.blocks)) |
| for i := range f.blocks { |
| t[i].Block = f.blocks[i] |
| t[i].index = i |
| } |
| sort.Sort(blockSlice(t)) |
| for i := 1; i < len(t); i++ { |
| if t[i-1].endByte > t[i].startByte { |
| fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "cover: internal error: block %d overlaps block %d\n", t[i-1].index, t[i].index) |
| // Note: error message is in byte positions, not token positions. |
| fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "\t%s:#%d,#%d %s:#%d,#%d\n", |
| f.name, f.offset(t[i-1].startByte), f.offset(t[i-1].endByte), |
| f.name, f.offset(t[i].startByte), f.offset(t[i].endByte)) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Declare the coverage struct as a package-level variable. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\nvar %s = struct {\n", *varVar) |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tCount [%d]uint32\n", len(f.blocks)) |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tPos [3 * %d]uint32\n", len(f.blocks)) |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tNumStmt [%d]uint16\n", len(f.blocks)) |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "} {\n") |
| |
| // Initialize the position array field. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tPos: [3 * %d]uint32{\n", len(f.blocks)) |
| |
| // A nice long list of positions. Each position is encoded as follows to reduce size: |
| // - 32-bit starting line number |
| // - 32-bit ending line number |
| // - (16 bit ending column number << 16) | (16-bit starting column number). |
| for i, block := range f.blocks { |
| start := f.fset.Position(block.startByte) |
| end := f.fset.Position(block.endByte) |
| |
| start, end = dedup(start, end) |
| |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t\t%d, %d, %#x, // [%d]\n", start.Line, end.Line, (end.Column&0xFFFF)<<16|(start.Column&0xFFFF), i) |
| } |
| |
| // Close the position array. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t},\n") |
| |
| // Initialize the position array field. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\tNumStmt: [%d]uint16{\n", len(f.blocks)) |
| |
| // A nice long list of statements-per-block, so we can give a conventional |
| // valuation of "percent covered". To save space, it's a 16-bit number, so we |
| // clamp it if it overflows - won't matter in practice. |
| for i, block := range f.blocks { |
| n := block.numStmt |
| if n > 1<<16-1 { |
| n = 1<<16 - 1 |
| } |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t\t%d, // %d\n", n, i) |
| } |
| |
| // Close the statements-per-block array. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\t},\n") |
| |
| // Close the struct initialization. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "}\n") |
| } |
| |
| // It is possible for positions to repeat when there is a line |
| // directive that does not specify column information and the input |
| // has not been passed through gofmt. |
| // See issues #27530 and #30746. |
| // Tests are TestHtmlUnformatted and TestLineDup. |
| // We use a map to avoid duplicates. |
| |
| // pos2 is a pair of token.Position values, used as a map key type. |
| type pos2 struct { |
| p1, p2 token.Position |
| } |
| |
| // seenPos2 tracks whether we have seen a token.Position pair. |
| var seenPos2 = make(map[pos2]bool) |
| |
| // dedup takes a token.Position pair and returns a pair that does not |
| // duplicate any existing pair. The returned pair will have the Offset |
| // fields cleared. |
| func dedup(p1, p2 token.Position) (r1, r2 token.Position) { |
| key := pos2{ |
| p1: p1, |
| p2: p2, |
| } |
| |
| // We want to ignore the Offset fields in the map, |
| // since cover uses only file/line/column. |
| key.p1.Offset = 0 |
| key.p2.Offset = 0 |
| |
| for seenPos2[key] { |
| key.p2.Column++ |
| } |
| seenPos2[key] = true |
| |
| return key.p1, key.p2 |
| } |
| |
| func (p *Package) emitMetaData(w io.Writer) { |
| if *pkgcfg == "" { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // Something went wrong if regonly/testmain mode is in effect and |
| // we have instrumented functions. |
| if counterStmt == nil && len(p.counterLengths) != 0 { |
| panic("internal error: seen functions with regonly/testmain") |
| } |
| |
| // Emit package ID var. |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\nvar %sP uint32\n", *varVar) |
| |
| // Emit all of the counter variables. |
| for k := range p.counterLengths { |
| cvn := mkCounterVarName(k) |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "var %s [%d]uint32\n", cvn, p.counterLengths[k]) |
| } |
| |
| // Emit encoded meta-data. |
| var sws slicewriter.WriteSeeker |
| digest, err := p.mdb.Emit(&sws) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("encoding meta-data: %v", err) |
| } |
| p.mdb = nil |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "var %s = [...]byte{\n", mkMetaVar()) |
| payload := sws.BytesWritten() |
| for k, b := range payload { |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, " 0x%x,", b) |
| if k != 0 && k%8 == 0 { |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "\n") |
| } |
| } |
| fmt.Fprintf(w, "}\n") |
| |
| fixcfg := coverage.CoverFixupConfig{ |
| Strategy: "normal", |
| MetaVar: mkMetaVar(), |
| MetaLen: len(payload), |
| MetaHash: fmt.Sprintf("%x", digest), |
| PkgIdVar: mkPackageIdVar(), |
| CounterPrefix: *varVar, |
| CounterGranularity: pkgconfig.Granularity, |
| CounterMode: *mode, |
| } |
| fixdata, err := json.Marshal(fixcfg) |
| if err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("marshal fixupcfg: %v", err) |
| } |
| if err := os.WriteFile(pkgconfig.OutConfig, fixdata, 0666); err != nil { |
| log.Fatalf("error writing %s: %v", pkgconfig.OutConfig, err) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // atomicOnAtomic returns true if we're instrumenting |
| // the sync/atomic package AND using atomic mode. |
| func atomicOnAtomic() bool { |
| return *mode == "atomic" && pkgconfig.PkgPath == "sync/atomic" |
| } |
| |
| // atomicPackagePrefix returns the import path prefix used to refer to |
| // our special import of sync/atomic; this is either set to the |
| // constant atomicPackageName plus a dot or the empty string if we're |
| // instrumenting the sync/atomic package itself. |
| func atomicPackagePrefix() string { |
| if atomicOnAtomic() { |
| return "" |
| } |
| return atomicPackageName + "." |
| } |