blob: 18cd030fcdcda391ea004c6c5ce30bd2d82dca52 [file] [log] [blame]
# https://golang.org/issue/36876: As of Go 1.17, vendor/modules.txt should
# indicate the language version used by each dependency.
[short] skip
# Control case: without a vendor directory, need117 builds and bad114 doesn't.
go build example.net/need117
! go build example.net/bad114
stderr '^bad114[/\\]bad114.go:15:2: duplicate method .?Y.?( .*)?$'
# With a vendor/modules.txt lacking language versions, the world is topsy-turvy,
# because we have to guess a uniform version for everything.
#
# We always guess Go 1.16, because that was the last version for which
# 'go mod vendor' failed to record dependency versions, and it has most of
# the language features added since modules were introduced in Go 1.11.
#
# Even so, modules that declare 'go 1.17' and use 1.17 features spuriously fail
# to build, and modules that declare an older version and use features from a
# newer one spuriously build (instead of failing as they ought to).
go mod vendor
! grep 1.17 vendor/modules.txt
! go build example.net/need117
stderr '^vendor[/\\]example\.net[/\\]need117[/\\]need117.go:5:1[89]:'
stderr 'conversion of slice to array pointer requires go1\.17 or later'
! grep 1.13 vendor/modules.txt
go build example.net/bad114
# Upgrading the main module to 1.17 adds version annotations.
# Then everything is once again consistent with the non-vendored world.
go mod edit -go=1.17
go mod vendor
grep '^## explicit; go 1.17$' vendor/modules.txt
go build example.net/need117
grep '^## explicit; go 1.13$' vendor/modules.txt
! go build example.net/bad114
stderr '^vendor[/\\]example\.net[/\\]bad114[/\\]bad114.go:15:2: duplicate method .?Y.?( .*)?$'
-- go.mod --
module example.net/m
go 1.16
require (
example.net/bad114 v0.1.0
example.net/need117 v0.1.0
)
replace (
example.net/bad114 v0.1.0 => ./bad114
example.net/need117 v0.1.0 => ./need117
)
-- m.go --
package m
import _ "example.net/bad114"
import _ "example.net/need117"
-- bad114/go.mod --
// Module bad114 requires Go 1.14 or higher, but declares Go 1.13.
module example.net/bad114
go 1.13
-- bad114/bad114.go --
package bad114
type XY interface {
X()
Y()
}
type YZ interface {
Y()
Z()
}
type XYZ interface {
XY
YZ
}
-- need117/go.mod --
// Module need117 requires Go 1.17 or higher.
module example.net/need117
go 1.17
-- need117/need117.go --
package need117
func init() {
s := make([]byte, 4)
_ = (*[4]byte)(s)
}