|  | <!--{ | 
|  | "Title": "Go 1 Release Notes", | 
|  | "Path":  "/doc/go1", | 
|  | "Template": true | 
|  | }--> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="introduction">Introduction to Go 1</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go version 1, Go 1 for short, defines a language and a set of core libraries | 
|  | that provide a stable foundation for creating reliable products, projects, and | 
|  | publications. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The driving motivation for Go 1 is stability for its users. People should be able to | 
|  | write Go programs and expect that they will continue to compile and run without | 
|  | change, on a time scale of years, including in production environments such as | 
|  | Google App Engine. Similarly, people should be able to write books about Go, be | 
|  | able to say which version of Go the book is describing, and have that version | 
|  | number still be meaningful much later. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Code that compiles in Go 1 should, with few exceptions, continue to compile and | 
|  | run throughout the lifetime of that version, even as we issue updates and bug | 
|  | fixes such as Go version 1.1, 1.2, and so on. Other than critical fixes, changes | 
|  | made to the language and library for subsequent releases of Go 1 may | 
|  | add functionality but will not break existing Go 1 programs. | 
|  | <a href="go1compat.html">The Go 1 compatibility document</a> | 
|  | explains the compatibility guidelines in more detail. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 is a representation of Go as it used today, not a wholesale rethinking of | 
|  | the language. We avoided designing new features and instead focused on cleaning | 
|  | up problems and inconsistencies and improving portability. There are a number | 
|  | changes to the Go language and packages that we had considered for some time and | 
|  | prototyped but not released primarily because they are significant and | 
|  | backwards-incompatible. Go 1 was an opportunity to get them out, which is | 
|  | helpful for the long term, but also means that Go 1 introduces incompatibilities | 
|  | for old programs. Fortunately, the <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> tool can | 
|  | automate much of the work needed to bring programs up to the Go 1 standard. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This document outlines the major changes in Go 1 that will affect programmers | 
|  | updating existing code; its reference point is the prior release, r60 (tagged as | 
|  | r60.3). It also explains how to update code from r60 to run under Go 1. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="language">Changes to the language</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="append">Append</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>append</code> predeclared variadic function makes it easy to grow a slice | 
|  | by adding elements to the end. | 
|  | A common use is to add bytes to the end of a byte slice when generating output. | 
|  | However, <code>append</code> did not provide a way to append a string to a <code>[]byte</code>, | 
|  | which is another common case. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/greeting := ..byte/` `/append.*hello/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | By analogy with the similar property of <code>copy</code>, Go 1 | 
|  | permits a string to be appended (byte-wise) directly to a byte | 
|  | slice, reducing the friction between strings and byte slices. | 
|  | The conversion is no longer necessary: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/append.*world/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | This is a new feature, so existing code needs no changes. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="close">Close</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>close</code> predeclared function provides a mechanism | 
|  | for a sender to signal that no more values will be sent. | 
|  | It is important to the implementation of <code>for</code> <code>range</code> | 
|  | loops over channels and is helpful in other situations. | 
|  | Partly by design and partly because of race conditions that can occur otherwise, | 
|  | it is intended for use only by the goroutine sending on the channel, | 
|  | not by the goroutine receiving data. | 
|  | However, before Go 1 there was no compile-time checking that <code>close</code> | 
|  | was being used correctly. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | To close this gap, at least in part, Go 1 disallows <code>close</code> on receive-only channels. | 
|  | Attempting to close such a channel is a compile-time error. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | var c chan int | 
|  | var csend chan<- int = c | 
|  | var crecv <-chan int = c | 
|  | close(c)     // legal | 
|  | close(csend) // legal | 
|  | close(crecv) // illegal | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Existing code that attempts to close a receive-only channel was | 
|  | erroneous even before Go 1 and should be fixed.  The compiler will | 
|  | now reject such code. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="literals">Composite literals</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, a composite literal of array, slice, or map type can elide the | 
|  | type specification for the elements' initializers if they are of pointer type. | 
|  | All four of the initializations in this example are legal; the last one was illegal before Go 1. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/type Date struct/` `/STOP/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | This change has no effect on existing code, but the command | 
|  | <code>gofmt</code> <code>-s</code> applied to existing source | 
|  | will, among other things, elide explicit element types wherever permitted. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="init">Goroutines during init</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old language defined that <code>go</code> statements executed during initialization created goroutines but that they did not begin to run until initialization of the entire program was complete. | 
|  | This introduced clumsiness in many places and, in effect, limited the utility | 
|  | of the <code>init</code> construct: | 
|  | if it was possible for another package to use the library during initialization, the library | 
|  | was forced to avoid goroutines. | 
|  | This design was done for reasons of simplicity and safety but, | 
|  | as our confidence in the language grew, it seemed unnecessary. | 
|  | Running goroutines during initialization is no more complex or unsafe than running them during normal execution. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, code that uses goroutines can be called from | 
|  | <code>init</code> routines and global initialization expressions | 
|  | without introducing a deadlock. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/PackageGlobal/` `/^}/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | This is a new feature, so existing code needs no changes, | 
|  | although it's possible that code that depends on goroutines not starting before <code>main</code> will break. | 
|  | There was no such code in the standard repository. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="rune">The rune type</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The language spec allows the <code>int</code> type to be 32 or 64 bits wide, but current implementations set <code>int</code> to 32 bits even on 64-bit platforms. | 
|  | It would be preferable to have <code>int</code> be 64 bits on 64-bit platforms. | 
|  | (There are important consequences for indexing large slices.) | 
|  | However, this change would waste space when processing Unicode characters with | 
|  | the old language because the <code>int</code> type was also used to hold Unicode code points: each code point would waste an extra 32 bits of storage if <code>int</code> grew from 32 bits to 64. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | To make changing to 64-bit <code>int</code> feasible, | 
|  | Go 1 introduces a new basic type, <code>rune</code>, to represent | 
|  | individual Unicode code points. | 
|  | It is an alias for <code>int32</code>, analogous to <code>byte</code> | 
|  | as an alias for <code>uint8</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Character literals such as <code>'a'</code>, <code>'語'</code>, and <code>'\u0345'</code> | 
|  | now have default type <code>rune</code>, | 
|  | analogous to <code>1.0</code> having default type <code>float64</code>. | 
|  | A variable initialized to a character constant will therefore | 
|  | have type <code>rune</code> unless otherwise specified. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Libraries have been updated to use <code>rune</code> rather than <code>int</code> | 
|  | when appropriate. For instance, the functions <code>unicode.ToLower</code> and | 
|  | relatives now take and return a <code>rune</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/STARTRUNE/` `/ENDRUNE/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Most source code will be unaffected by this because the type inference from | 
|  | <code>:=</code> initializers introduces the new type silently, and it propagates | 
|  | from there. | 
|  | Some code may get type errors that a trivial conversion will resolve. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="error">The error type</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 introduces a new built-in type, <code>error</code>, which has the following definition: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | type error interface { | 
|  | Error() string | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Since the consequences of this type are all in the package library, | 
|  | it is discussed <a href="#errors">below</a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="delete">Deleting from maps</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In the old language, to delete the entry with key <code>k</code> from map <code>m</code>, one wrote the statement, | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | m[k] = value, false | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This syntax was a peculiar special case, the only two-to-one assignment. | 
|  | It required passing a value (usually ignored) that is evaluated but discarded, | 
|  | plus a boolean that was nearly always the constant <code>false</code>. | 
|  | It did the job but was odd and a point of contention. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, that syntax has gone; instead there is a new built-in | 
|  | function, <code>delete</code>.  The call | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/delete\(m, k\)/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | will delete the map entry retrieved by the expression <code>m[k]</code>. | 
|  | There is no return value. Deleting a non-existent entry is a no-op. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will convert expressions of the form <code>m[k] = value, | 
|  | false</code> into <code>delete(m, k)</code> when it is clear that | 
|  | the ignored value can be safely discarded from the program and | 
|  | <code>false</code> refers to the predefined boolean constant. | 
|  | The fix tool | 
|  | will flag other uses of the syntax for inspection by the programmer. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="iteration">Iterating in maps</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old language specification did not define the order of iteration for maps, | 
|  | and in practice it differed across hardware platforms. | 
|  | This caused tests that iterated over maps to be fragile and non-portable, with the | 
|  | unpleasant property that a test might always pass on one machine but break on another. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the order in which elements are visited when iterating | 
|  | over a map using a <code>for</code> <code>range</code> statement | 
|  | is defined to be unpredictable, even if the same loop is run multiple | 
|  | times with the same map. | 
|  | Code should not assume that the elements are visited in any particular order. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This change means that code that depends on iteration order is very likely to break early and be fixed long before it becomes a problem. | 
|  | Just as important, it allows the map implementation to ensure better map balancing even when programs are using range loops to select an element from a map. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/Sunday/` `/^	}/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | This is one change where tools cannot help.  Most existing code | 
|  | will be unaffected, but some programs may break or misbehave; we | 
|  | recommend manual checking of all range statements over maps to | 
|  | verify they do not depend on iteration order. There were a few such | 
|  | examples in the standard repository; they have been fixed. | 
|  | Note that it was already incorrect to depend on the iteration order, which | 
|  | was unspecified. This change codifies the unpredictability. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="multiple_assignment">Multiple assignment</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The language specification has long guaranteed that in assignments | 
|  | the right-hand-side expressions are all evaluated before any left-hand-side expressions are assigned. | 
|  | To guarantee predictable behavior, | 
|  | Go 1 refines the specification further. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | If the left-hand side of the assignment | 
|  | statement contains expressions that require evaluation, such as | 
|  | function calls or array indexing operations, these will all be done | 
|  | using the usual left-to-right rule before any variables are assigned | 
|  | their value.  Once everything is evaluated, the actual assignments | 
|  | proceed in left-to-right order. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | These examples illustrate the behavior. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/sa :=/` `/then sc.0. = 2/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | This is one change where tools cannot help, but breakage is unlikely. | 
|  | No code in the standard repository was broken by this change, and code | 
|  | that depended on the previous unspecified behavior was already incorrect. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="shadowing">Returns and shadowed variables</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | A common mistake is to use <code>return</code> (without arguments) after an assignment to a variable that has the same name as a result variable but is not the same variable. | 
|  | This situation is called <em>shadowing</em>: the result variable has been shadowed by another variable with the same name declared in an inner scope. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In functions with named return values, | 
|  | the Go 1 compilers disallow return statements without arguments if any of the named return values is shadowed at the point of the return statement. | 
|  | (It isn't part of the specification, because this is one area we are still exploring; | 
|  | the situation is analogous to the compilers rejecting functions that do not end with an explicit return statement.) | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This function implicitly returns a shadowed return value and will be rejected by the compiler: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | func Bug() (i, j, k int) { | 
|  | for i = 0; i < 5; i++ { | 
|  | for j := 0; j < 5; j++ { // Redeclares j. | 
|  | k += i*j | 
|  | if k > 100 { | 
|  | return // Rejected: j is shadowed here. | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | return // OK: j is not shadowed here. | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that shadows return values in this way will be rejected by the compiler and will need to be fixed by hand. | 
|  | The few cases that arose in the standard repository were mostly bugs. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="unexported">Copying structs with unexported fields</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old language did not allow a package to make a copy of a struct value containing unexported fields belonging to a different package. | 
|  | There was, however, a required exception for a method receiver; | 
|  | also, the implementations of <code>copy</code> and <code>append</code> have never honored the restriction. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 will allow packages to copy struct values containing unexported fields from other packages. | 
|  | Besides resolving the inconsistency, | 
|  | this change admits a new kind of API: a package can return an opaque value without resorting to a pointer or interface. | 
|  | The new implementations of <code>time.Time</code> and | 
|  | <code>reflect.Value</code> are examples of types taking advantage of this new property. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | As an example, if package <code>p</code> includes the definitions, | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | type Struct struct { | 
|  | Public int | 
|  | secret int | 
|  | } | 
|  | func NewStruct(a int) Struct {  // Note: not a pointer. | 
|  | return Struct{a, f(a)} | 
|  | } | 
|  | func (s Struct) String() string { | 
|  | return fmt.Sprintf("{%d (secret %d)}", s.Public, s.secret) | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | a package that imports <code>p</code> can assign and copy values of type | 
|  | <code>p.Struct</code> at will. | 
|  | Behind the scenes the unexported fields will be assigned and copied just | 
|  | as if they were exported, | 
|  | but the client code will never be aware of them. The code | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | import "p" | 
|  |  | 
|  | myStruct := p.NewStruct(23) | 
|  | copyOfMyStruct := myStruct | 
|  | fmt.Println(myStruct, copyOfMyStruct) | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | will show that the secret field of the struct has been copied to the new value. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | This is a new feature, so existing code needs no changes. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="equality">Equality</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Before Go 1, the language did not define equality on struct and array values. | 
|  | This meant, | 
|  | among other things, that structs and arrays could not be used as map keys. | 
|  | On the other hand, Go did define equality on function and map values. | 
|  | Function equality was problematic in the presence of closures | 
|  | (when are two closures equal?) | 
|  | while map equality compared pointers, not the maps' content, which was usually | 
|  | not what the user would want. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 addressed these issues. | 
|  | First, structs and arrays can be compared for equality and inequality | 
|  | (<code>==</code> and <code>!=</code>), | 
|  | and therefore be used as map keys, | 
|  | provided they are composed from elements for which equality is also defined, | 
|  | using element-wise comparison. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/type Day struct/` `/Printf/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Second, Go 1 removes the definition of equality for function values, | 
|  | except for comparison with <code>nil</code>. | 
|  | Finally, map equality is gone too, also except for comparison with <code>nil</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Note that equality is still undefined for slices, for which the | 
|  | calculation is in general infeasible.  Also note that the ordered | 
|  | comparison operators (<code><</code> <code><=</code> | 
|  | <code>></code> <code>>=</code>) are still undefined for | 
|  | structs and arrays. | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Struct and array equality is a new feature, so existing code needs no changes. | 
|  | Existing code that depends on function or map equality will be | 
|  | rejected by the compiler and will need to be fixed by hand. | 
|  | Few programs will be affected, but the fix may require some | 
|  | redesign. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="packages">The package hierarchy</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 addresses many deficiencies in the old standard library and | 
|  | cleans up a number of packages, making them more internally consistent | 
|  | and portable. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This section describes how the packages have been rearranged in Go 1. | 
|  | Some have moved, some have been renamed, some have been deleted. | 
|  | New packages are described in later sections. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="hierarchy">The package hierarchy</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 has a rearranged package hierarchy that groups related items | 
|  | into subdirectories. For instance, <code>utf8</code> and | 
|  | <code>utf16</code> now occupy subdirectories of <code>unicode</code>. | 
|  | Also, <a href="#subrepo">some packages</a> have moved into | 
|  | subrepositories of | 
|  | <a href="//code.google.com/p/go"><code>code.google.com/p/go</code></a> | 
|  | while <a href="#deleted">others</a> have been deleted outright. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <table class="codetable" frame="border" summary="Moved packages"> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="60%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="40%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th align="left">Old path</th> | 
|  | <th align="left">New path</th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>asn1</td> <td>encoding/asn1</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>csv</td> <td>encoding/csv</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>gob</td> <td>encoding/gob</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>json</td> <td>encoding/json</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>xml</td> <td>encoding/xml</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>exp/template/html</td> <td>html/template</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>big</td> <td>math/big</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>cmath</td> <td>math/cmplx</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>rand</td> <td>math/rand</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>http</td> <td>net/http</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>http/cgi</td> <td>net/http/cgi</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>http/fcgi</td> <td>net/http/fcgi</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>http/httptest</td> <td>net/http/httptest</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>http/pprof</td> <td>net/http/pprof</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>mail</td> <td>net/mail</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>rpc</td> <td>net/rpc</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>rpc/jsonrpc</td> <td>net/rpc/jsonrpc</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>smtp</td> <td>net/smtp</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>url</td> <td>net/url</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>exec</td> <td>os/exec</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>scanner</td> <td>text/scanner</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>tabwriter</td> <td>text/tabwriter</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>template</td> <td>text/template</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>template/parse</td> <td>text/template/parse</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>utf8</td> <td>unicode/utf8</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>utf16</td> <td>unicode/utf16</td></tr> | 
|  | </table> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Note that the package names for the old <code>cmath</code> and | 
|  | <code>exp/template/html</code> packages have changed to <code>cmplx</code> | 
|  | and <code>template</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update all imports and package renames for packages that | 
|  | remain inside the standard repository.  Programs that import packages | 
|  | that are no longer in the standard repository will need to be edited | 
|  | by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="exp">The package tree exp</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Because they are not standardized, the packages under the <code>exp</code> directory will not be available in the | 
|  | standard Go 1 release distributions, although they will be available in source code form | 
|  | in <a href="//code.google.com/p/go/">the repository</a> for | 
|  | developers who wish to use them. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Several packages have moved under <code>exp</code> at the time of Go 1's release: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><code>ebnf</code></li> | 
|  | <li><code>html</code><sup>†</sup></li> | 
|  | <li><code>go/types</code></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | (<sup>†</sup>The <code>EscapeString</code> and <code>UnescapeString</code> types remain | 
|  | in package <code>html</code>.) | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | All these packages are available under the same names, with the prefix <code>exp/</code>: <code>exp/ebnf</code> etc. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Also, the <code>utf8.String</code> type has been moved to its own package, <code>exp/utf8string</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Finally, the <code>gotype</code> command now resides in <code>exp/gotype</code>, while | 
|  | <code>ebnflint</code> is now in <code>exp/ebnflint</code>. | 
|  | If they are installed, they now reside in <code>$GOROOT/bin/tool</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses packages in <code>exp</code> will need to be updated by hand, | 
|  | or else compiled from an installation that has <code>exp</code> available. | 
|  | The <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> tool or the compiler will complain about such uses. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="old">The package tree old</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Because they are deprecated, the packages under the <code>old</code> directory will not be available in the | 
|  | standard Go 1 release distributions, although they will be available in source code form for | 
|  | developers who wish to use them. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The packages in their new locations are: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><code>old/netchan</code></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses packages now in <code>old</code> will need to be updated by hand, | 
|  | or else compiled from an installation that has <code>old</code> available. | 
|  | The <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> tool will warn about such uses. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="deleted">Deleted packages</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 deletes several packages outright: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li><code>container/vector</code></li> | 
|  | <li><code>exp/datafmt</code></li> | 
|  | <li><code>go/typechecker</code></li> | 
|  | <li><code>old/regexp</code></li> | 
|  | <li><code>old/template</code></li> | 
|  | <li><code>try</code></li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | and also the command <code>gotry</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses <code>container/vector</code> should be updated to use | 
|  | slices directly.  See | 
|  | <a href="//code.google.com/p/go-wiki/wiki/SliceTricks">the Go | 
|  | Language Community Wiki</a> for some suggestions. | 
|  | Code that uses the other packages (there should be almost zero) will need to be rethought. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="subrepo">Packages moving to subrepositories</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 has moved a number of packages into other repositories, usually sub-repositories of | 
|  | <a href="//code.google.com/p/go/">the main Go repository</a>. | 
|  | This table lists the old and new import paths: | 
|  |  | 
|  | <table class="codetable" frame="border" summary="Sub-repositories"> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="40%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="60%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th align="left">Old</th> | 
|  | <th align="left">New</th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/bcrypt</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/bcrypt</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/blowfish</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/blowfish</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/cast5</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/cast5</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/md4</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/md4</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/ocsp</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/ocsp</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/openpgp</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/openpgp</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/openpgp/armor</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/openpgp/armor</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/openpgp/elgamal</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/openpgp/elgamal</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/openpgp/errors</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/openpgp/errors</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/openpgp/packet</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/openpgp/packet</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/openpgp/s2k</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/openpgp/s2k</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/ripemd160</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/ripemd160</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/twofish</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/twofish</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>crypto/xtea</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/xtea</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>exp/ssh</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.crypto/ssh</tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image/bmp</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.image/bmp</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image/tiff</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.image/tiff</tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>net/dict</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.net/dict</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>net/websocket</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.net/websocket</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>exp/spdy</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.net/spdy</tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>encoding/git85</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.codereview/git85</tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>patch</td> <td>code.google.com/p/go.codereview/patch</tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>exp/wingui</td> <td>code.google.com/p/gowingui</tr> | 
|  | </table> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update imports of these packages to use the new import paths. | 
|  | Installations that depend on these packages will need to install them using | 
|  | a <code>go get</code> command. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="major">Major changes to the library</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This section describes significant changes to the core libraries, the ones that | 
|  | affect the most programs. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="errors">The error type and errors package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The placement of <code>os.Error</code> in package <code>os</code> is mostly historical: errors first came up when implementing package <code>os</code>, and they seemed system-related at the time. | 
|  | Since then it has become clear that errors are more fundamental than the operating system.  For example, it would be nice to use <code>Errors</code> in packages that <code>os</code> depends on, like <code>syscall</code>. | 
|  | Also, having <code>Error</code> in <code>os</code> introduces many dependencies on <code>os</code> that would otherwise not exist. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 solves these problems by introducing a built-in <code>error</code> interface type and a separate <code>errors</code> package (analogous to <code>bytes</code> and <code>strings</code>) that contains utility functions. | 
|  | It replaces <code>os.NewError</code> with | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/errors/#New"><code>errors.New</code></a>, | 
|  | giving errors a more central place in the environment. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | So the widely-used <code>String</code> method does not cause accidental satisfaction | 
|  | of the <code>error</code> interface, the <code>error</code> interface uses instead | 
|  | the name <code>Error</code> for that method: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | type error interface { | 
|  | Error() string | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>fmt</code> library automatically invokes <code>Error</code>, as it already | 
|  | does for <code>String</code>, for easy printing of error values. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/START ERROR EXAMPLE/` `/END ERROR EXAMPLE/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | All standard packages have been updated to use the new interface; the old <code>os.Error</code> is gone. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | A new package, <a href="/pkg/errors/"><code>errors</code></a>, contains the function | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | func New(text string) error | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | to turn a string into an error. It replaces the old <code>os.NewError</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/ErrSyntax/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update almost all code affected by the change. | 
|  | Code that defines error types with a <code>String</code> method will need to be updated | 
|  | by hand to rename the methods to <code>Error</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="errno">System call errors</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old <code>syscall</code> package, which predated <code>os.Error</code> | 
|  | (and just about everything else), | 
|  | returned errors as <code>int</code> values. | 
|  | In turn, the <code>os</code> package forwarded many of these errors, such | 
|  | as <code>EINVAL</code>, but using a different set of errors on each platform. | 
|  | This behavior was unpleasant and unportable. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/syscall/"><code>syscall</code></a> | 
|  | package instead returns an <code>error</code> for system call errors. | 
|  | On Unix, the implementation is done by a | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/syscall/#Errno"><code>syscall.Errno</code></a> type | 
|  | that satisfies <code>error</code> and replaces the old <code>os.Errno</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The changes affecting <code>os.EINVAL</code> and relatives are | 
|  | described <a href="#os">elsewhere</a>. | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update almost all code affected by the change. | 
|  | Regardless, most code should use the <code>os</code> package | 
|  | rather than <code>syscall</code> and so will be unaffected. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="time">Time</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Time is always a challenge to support well in a programming language. | 
|  | The old Go <code>time</code> package had <code>int64</code> units, no | 
|  | real type safety, | 
|  | and no distinction between absolute times and durations. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | One of the most sweeping changes in the Go 1 library is therefore a | 
|  | complete redesign of the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/time/"><code>time</code></a> package. | 
|  | Instead of an integer number of nanoseconds as an <code>int64</code>, | 
|  | and a separate <code>*time.Time</code> type to deal with human | 
|  | units such as hours and years, | 
|  | there are now two fundamental types: | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/time/#Time"><code>time.Time</code></a> | 
|  | (a value, so the <code>*</code> is gone), which represents a moment in time; | 
|  | and <a href="/pkg/time/#Duration"><code>time.Duration</code></a>, | 
|  | which represents an interval. | 
|  | Both have nanosecond resolution. | 
|  | A <code>Time</code> can represent any time into the ancient | 
|  | past and remote future, while a <code>Duration</code> can | 
|  | span plus or minus only about 290 years. | 
|  | There are methods on these types, plus a number of helpful | 
|  | predefined constant durations such as <code>time.Second</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Among the new methods are things like | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/time/#Time.Add"><code>Time.Add</code></a>, | 
|  | which adds a <code>Duration</code> to a <code>Time</code>, and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/time/#Time.Sub"><code>Time.Sub</code></a>, | 
|  | which subtracts two <code>Times</code> to yield a <code>Duration</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The most important semantic change is that the Unix epoch (Jan 1, 1970) is now | 
|  | relevant only for those functions and methods that mention Unix: | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/time/#Unix"><code>time.Unix</code></a> | 
|  | and the <a href="/pkg/time/#Time.Unix"><code>Unix</code></a> | 
|  | and <a href="/pkg/time/#Time.UnixNano"><code>UnixNano</code></a> methods | 
|  | of the <code>Time</code> type. | 
|  | In particular, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/time/#Now"><code>time.Now</code></a> | 
|  | returns a <code>time.Time</code> value rather than, in the old | 
|  | API, an integer nanosecond count since the Unix epoch. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/sleepUntil/` `/^}/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The new types, methods, and constants have been propagated through | 
|  | all the standard packages that use time, such as <code>os</code> and | 
|  | its representation of file time stamps. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | The <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> tool will update many uses of the old <code>time</code> package to use the new | 
|  | types and methods, although it does not replace values such as <code>1e9</code> | 
|  | representing nanoseconds per second. | 
|  | Also, because of type changes in some of the values that arise, | 
|  | some of the expressions rewritten by the fix tool may require | 
|  | further hand editing; in such cases the rewrite will include | 
|  | the correct function or method for the old functionality, but | 
|  | may have the wrong type or require further analysis. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="minor">Minor changes to the library</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This section describes smaller changes, such as those to less commonly | 
|  | used packages or that affect | 
|  | few programs beyond the need to run <code>go</code> <code>fix</code>. | 
|  | This category includes packages that are new in Go 1. | 
|  | Collectively they improve portability, regularize behavior, and | 
|  | make the interfaces more modern and Go-like. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="archive_zip">The archive/zip package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer"><code>*zip.Writer</code></a> no | 
|  | longer has a <code>Write</code> method. Its presence was a mistake. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | What little code is affected will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="bufio">The bufio package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, <a href="/pkg/bufio/#NewReaderSize"><code>bufio.NewReaderSize</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/bufio/#NewWriterSize"><code>bufio.NewWriterSize</code></a> | 
|  | functions no longer return an error for invalid sizes. | 
|  | If the argument size is too small or invalid, it is adjusted. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update calls that assign the error to _. | 
|  | Calls that aren't fixed will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="compress">The compress/flate, compress/gzip and compress/zlib packages</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <code>NewWriterXxx</code> functions in | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/compress/flate"><code>compress/flate</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/compress/gzip"><code>compress/gzip</code></a> and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/compress/zlib"><code>compress/zlib</code></a> | 
|  | all return <code>(*Writer, error)</code> if they take a compression level, | 
|  | and <code>*Writer</code> otherwise. Package <code>gzip</code>'s | 
|  | <code>Compressor</code> and <code>Decompressor</code> types have been renamed | 
|  | to <code>Writer</code> and <code>Reader</code>. Package <code>flate</code>'s | 
|  | <code>WrongValueError</code> type has been removed. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em> | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update old names and calls that assign the error to _. | 
|  | Calls that aren't fixed will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="crypto_aes_des">The crypto/aes and crypto/des packages</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <code>Reset</code> method has been removed. Go does not guarantee | 
|  | that memory is not copied and therefore this method was misleading. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The cipher-specific types <code>*aes.Cipher</code>, <code>*des.Cipher</code>, | 
|  | and <code>*des.TripleDESCipher</code> have been removed in favor of | 
|  | <code>cipher.Block</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Remove the calls to Reset. Replace uses of the specific cipher types with | 
|  | cipher.Block. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="crypto_elliptic">The crypto/elliptic package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, <a href="/pkg/crypto/elliptic/#Curve"><code>elliptic.Curve</code></a> | 
|  | has been made an interface to permit alternative implementations. The curve | 
|  | parameters have been moved to the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/crypto/elliptic/#CurveParams"><code>elliptic.CurveParams</code></a> | 
|  | structure. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Existing users of <code>*elliptic.Curve</code> will need to change to | 
|  | simply <code>elliptic.Curve</code>. Calls to <code>Marshal</code>, | 
|  | <code>Unmarshal</code> and <code>GenerateKey</code> are now functions | 
|  | in <code>crypto/elliptic</code> that take an <code>elliptic.Curve</code> | 
|  | as their first argument. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="crypto_hmac">The crypto/hmac package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the hash-specific functions, such as <code>hmac.NewMD5</code>, have | 
|  | been removed from <code>crypto/hmac</code>. Instead, <code>hmac.New</code> takes | 
|  | a function that returns a <code>hash.Hash</code>, such as <code>md5.New</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will perform the needed changes. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="crypto_x509">The crypto/x509 package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/#CreateCertificate"><code>CreateCertificate</code></a> | 
|  | function and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/#Certificate.CreateCRL"><code>CreateCRL</code></a> | 
|  | method in <code>crypto/x509</code> have been altered to take an | 
|  | <code>interface{}</code> where they previously took a <code>*rsa.PublicKey</code> | 
|  | or <code>*rsa.PrivateKey</code>. This will allow other public key algorithms | 
|  | to be implemented in the future. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | No changes will be needed. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="encoding_binary">The encoding/binary package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <code>binary.TotalSize</code> function has been replaced by | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/encoding/binary/#Size"><code>Size</code></a>, | 
|  | which takes an <code>interface{}</code> argument rather than | 
|  | a <code>reflect.Value</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | What little code is affected will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="encoding_xml">The encoding/xml package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>xml</code></a> package | 
|  | has been brought closer in design to the other marshaling packages such | 
|  | as <a href="/pkg/encoding/gob/"><code>encoding/gob</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old <code>Parser</code> type is renamed | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a> and has a new | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder.Decode"><code>Decode</code></a> method. An | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Encoder"><code>Encoder</code></a> type was also introduced. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The functions <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Marshal"><code>Marshal</code></a> | 
|  | and <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Unmarshal"><code>Unmarshal</code></a> | 
|  | work with <code>[]byte</code> values now. To work with streams, | 
|  | use the new <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Encoder"><code>Encoder</code></a> | 
|  | and <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a> types. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | When marshaling or unmarshaling values, the format of supported flags in | 
|  | field tags has changed to be closer to the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/encoding/json"><code>json</code></a> package | 
|  | (<code>`xml:"name,flag"`</code>). The matching done between field tags, field | 
|  | names, and the XML attribute and element names is now case-sensitive. | 
|  | The <code>XMLName</code> field tag, if present, must also match the name | 
|  | of the XML element being marshaled. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update most uses of the package except for some calls to | 
|  | <code>Unmarshal</code>. Special care must be taken with field tags, | 
|  | since the fix tool will not update them and if not fixed by hand they will | 
|  | misbehave silently in some cases. For example, the old | 
|  | <code>"attr"</code> is now written <code>",attr"</code> while plain | 
|  | <code>"attr"</code> remains valid but with a different meaning. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="expvar">The expvar package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <code>RemoveAll</code> function has been removed. | 
|  | The <code>Iter</code> function and Iter method on <code>*Map</code> have | 
|  | been replaced by | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/expvar/#Do"><code>Do</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/expvar/#Map.Do"><code>(*Map).Do</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Most code using <code>expvar</code> will not need changing. The rare code that used | 
|  | <code>Iter</code> can be updated to pass a closure to <code>Do</code> to achieve the same effect. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="flag">The flag package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the interface <a href="/pkg/flag/#Value"><code>flag.Value</code></a> has changed slightly. | 
|  | The <code>Set</code> method now returns an <code>error</code> instead of | 
|  | a <code>bool</code> to indicate success or failure. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | There is also a new kind of flag, <code>Duration</code>, to support argument | 
|  | values specifying time intervals. | 
|  | Values for such flags must be given units, just as <code>time.Duration</code> | 
|  | formats them: <code>10s</code>, <code>1h30m</code>, etc. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/timeout/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Programs that implement their own flags will need minor manual fixes to update their | 
|  | <code>Set</code> methods. | 
|  | The <code>Duration</code> flag is new and affects no existing code. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="go">The go/* packages</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Several packages under <code>go</code> have slightly revised APIs. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | A concrete <code>Mode</code> type was introduced for configuration mode flags | 
|  | in the packages | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/scanner/"><code>go/scanner</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/parser/"><code>go/parser</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/printer/"><code>go/printer</code></a>, and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/doc/"><code>go/doc</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The modes <code>AllowIllegalChars</code> and <code>InsertSemis</code> have been removed | 
|  | from the <a href="/pkg/go/scanner/"><code>go/scanner</code></a> package. They were mostly | 
|  | useful for scanning text other then Go source files. Instead, the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/text/scanner/"><code>text/scanner</code></a> package should be used | 
|  | for that purpose. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/go/scanner/#ErrorHandler"><code>ErrorHandler</code></a> provided | 
|  | to the scanner's <a href="/pkg/go/scanner/#Scanner.Init"><code>Init</code></a> method is | 
|  | now simply a function rather than an interface. The <code>ErrorVector</code> type has | 
|  | been removed in favor of the (existing) <a href="/pkg/go/scanner/#ErrorList"><code>ErrorList</code></a> | 
|  | type, and the <code>ErrorVector</code> methods have been migrated. Instead of embedding | 
|  | an <code>ErrorVector</code> in a client of the scanner, now a client should maintain | 
|  | an <code>ErrorList</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The set of parse functions provided by the <a href="/pkg/go/parser/"><code>go/parser</code></a> | 
|  | package has been reduced to the primary parse function | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/parser/#ParseFile"><code>ParseFile</code></a>, and a couple of | 
|  | convenience functions <a href="/pkg/go/parser/#ParseDir"><code>ParseDir</code></a> | 
|  | and <a href="/pkg/go/parser/#ParseExpr"><code>ParseExpr</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/go/printer/"><code>go/printer</code></a> package supports an additional | 
|  | configuration mode <a href="/pkg/go/printer/#Mode"><code>SourcePos</code></a>; | 
|  | if set, the printer will emit <code>//line</code> comments such that the generated | 
|  | output contains the original source code position information. The new type | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/printer/#CommentedNode"><code>CommentedNode</code></a> can be | 
|  | used to provide comments associated with an arbitrary | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/ast/#Node"><code>ast.Node</code></a> (until now only | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/ast/#File"><code>ast.File</code></a> carried comment information). | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The type names of the <a href="/pkg/go/doc/"><code>go/doc</code></a> package have been | 
|  | streamlined by removing the <code>Doc</code> suffix: <code>PackageDoc</code> | 
|  | is now <code>Package</code>, <code>ValueDoc</code> is <code>Value</code>, etc. | 
|  | Also, all types now consistently have a <code>Name</code> field (or <code>Names</code>, | 
|  | in the case of type <code>Value</code>) and <code>Type.Factories</code> has become | 
|  | <code>Type.Funcs</code>. | 
|  | Instead of calling <code>doc.NewPackageDoc(pkg, importpath)</code>, | 
|  | documentation for a package is created with: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | doc.New(pkg, importpath, mode) | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | where the new <code>mode</code> parameter specifies the operation mode: | 
|  | if set to <a href="/pkg/go/doc/#AllDecls"><code>AllDecls</code></a>, all declarations | 
|  | (not just exported ones) are considered. | 
|  | The function <code>NewFileDoc</code> was removed, and the function | 
|  | <code>CommentText</code> has become the method | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/ast/#CommentGroup.Text"><code>Text</code></a> of | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/ast/#CommentGroup"><code>ast.CommentGroup</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In package <a href="/pkg/go/token/"><code>go/token</code></a>, the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/token/#FileSet"><code>token.FileSet</code></a> method <code>Files</code> | 
|  | (which originally returned a channel of <code>*token.File</code>s) has been replaced | 
|  | with the iterator <a href="/pkg/go/token/#FileSet.Iterate"><code>Iterate</code></a> that | 
|  | accepts a function argument instead. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In package <a href="/pkg/go/build/"><code>go/build</code></a>, the API | 
|  | has been nearly completely replaced. | 
|  | The package still computes Go package information | 
|  | but it does not run the build: the <code>Cmd</code> and <code>Script</code> | 
|  | types are gone. | 
|  | (To build code, use the new | 
|  | <a href="/cmd/go/"><code>go</code></a> command instead.) | 
|  | The <code>DirInfo</code> type is now named | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/build/#Package"><code>Package</code></a>. | 
|  | <code>FindTree</code> and <code>ScanDir</code> are replaced by | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/build/#Import"><code>Import</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/go/build/#ImportDir"><code>ImportDir</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses packages in <code>go</code> will have to be updated by hand; the | 
|  | compiler will reject incorrect uses. Templates used in conjunction with any of the | 
|  | <code>go/doc</code> types may need manual fixes; the renamed fields will lead | 
|  | to run-time errors. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="hash">The hash package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the definition of <a href="/pkg/hash/#Hash"><code>hash.Hash</code></a> includes | 
|  | a new method, <code>BlockSize</code>.  This new method is used primarily in the | 
|  | cryptographic libraries. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Sum</code> method of the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/hash/#Hash"><code>hash.Hash</code></a> interface now takes a | 
|  | <code>[]byte</code> argument, to which the hash value will be appended. | 
|  | The previous behavior can be recreated by adding a <code>nil</code> argument to the call. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Existing implementations of <code>hash.Hash</code> will need to add a | 
|  | <code>BlockSize</code> method.  Hashes that process the input one byte at | 
|  | a time can implement <code>BlockSize</code> to return 1. | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update calls to the <code>Sum</code> methods of the various | 
|  | implementations of <code>hash.Hash</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Since the package's functionality is new, no updating is necessary. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="http">The http package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1 the <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>http</code></a> package is refactored, | 
|  | putting some of the utilities into a | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/net/http/httputil/"><code>httputil</code></a> subdirectory. | 
|  | These pieces are only rarely needed by HTTP clients. | 
|  | The affected items are: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>ClientConn</li> | 
|  | <li>DumpRequest</li> | 
|  | <li>DumpRequestOut</li> | 
|  | <li>DumpResponse</li> | 
|  | <li>NewChunkedReader</li> | 
|  | <li>NewChunkedWriter</li> | 
|  | <li>NewClientConn</li> | 
|  | <li>NewProxyClientConn</li> | 
|  | <li>NewServerConn</li> | 
|  | <li>NewSingleHostReverseProxy</li> | 
|  | <li>ReverseProxy</li> | 
|  | <li>ServerConn</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Request.RawURL</code> field has been removed; it was a | 
|  | historical artifact. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Handle</code> and <code>HandleFunc</code> | 
|  | functions, and the similarly-named methods of <code>ServeMux</code>, | 
|  | now panic if an attempt is made to register the same pattern twice. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update the few programs that are affected except for | 
|  | uses of <code>RawURL</code>, which must be fixed by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="image">The image package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/image/"><code>image</code></a> package has had a number of | 
|  | minor changes, rearrangements and renamings. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Most of the color handling code has been moved into its own package, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/"><code>image/color</code></a>. | 
|  | For the elements that moved, a symmetry arises; for instance, | 
|  | each pixel of an | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/#RGBA"><code>image.RGBA</code></a> | 
|  | is a | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/#RGBA"><code>color.RGBA</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old <code>image/ycbcr</code> package has been folded, with some | 
|  | renamings, into the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/"><code>image</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/"><code>image/color</code></a> | 
|  | packages. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old <code>image.ColorImage</code> type is still in the <code>image</code> | 
|  | package but has been renamed | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/#Uniform"><code>image.Uniform</code></a>, | 
|  | while <code>image.Tiled</code> has been removed. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This table lists the renamings. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <table class="codetable" frame="border" summary="image renames"> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="50%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="50%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th align="left">Old</th> | 
|  | <th align="left">New</th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.Color</td> <td>color.Color</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.ColorModel</td> <td>color.Model</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.ColorModelFunc</td> <td>color.ModelFunc</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.PalettedColorModel</td> <td>color.Palette</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.RGBAColor</td> <td>color.RGBA</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.RGBA64Color</td> <td>color.RGBA64</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.NRGBAColor</td> <td>color.NRGBA</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.NRGBA64Color</td> <td>color.NRGBA64</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.AlphaColor</td> <td>color.Alpha</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.Alpha16Color</td> <td>color.Alpha16</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.GrayColor</td> <td>color.Gray</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.Gray16Color</td> <td>color.Gray16</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.RGBAColorModel</td> <td>color.RGBAModel</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.RGBA64ColorModel</td> <td>color.RGBA64Model</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.NRGBAColorModel</td> <td>color.NRGBAModel</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.NRGBA64ColorModel</td> <td>color.NRGBA64Model</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.AlphaColorModel</td> <td>color.AlphaModel</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.Alpha16ColorModel</td> <td>color.Alpha16Model</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.GrayColorModel</td> <td>color.GrayModel</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.Gray16ColorModel</td> <td>color.Gray16Model</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.RGBToYCbCr</td> <td>color.RGBToYCbCr</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.YCbCrToRGB</td> <td>color.YCbCrToRGB</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.YCbCrColorModel</td> <td>color.YCbCrModel</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.YCbCrColor</td> <td>color.YCbCr</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.YCbCr</td> <td>image.YCbCr</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.SubsampleRatio444</td> <td>image.YCbCrSubsampleRatio444</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.SubsampleRatio422</td> <td>image.YCbCrSubsampleRatio422</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>ycbcr.SubsampleRatio420</td> <td>image.YCbCrSubsampleRatio420</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>image.ColorImage</td> <td>image.Uniform</td></tr> | 
|  | </table> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The image package's <code>New</code> functions | 
|  | (<a href="/pkg/image/#NewRGBA"><code>NewRGBA</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/#NewRGBA64"><code>NewRGBA64</code></a>, etc.) | 
|  | take an <a href="/pkg/image/#Rectangle"><code>image.Rectangle</code></a> as an argument | 
|  | instead of four integers. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Finally, there are new predefined <code>color.Color</code> variables | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/#Black"><code>color.Black</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/#White"><code>color.White</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/#Opaque"><code>color.Opaque</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/image/color/#Transparent"><code>color.Transparent</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update almost all code affected by the change. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="log_syslog">The log/syslog package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <a href="/pkg/log/syslog/#NewLogger"><code>syslog.NewLogger</code></a> | 
|  | function returns an error as well as a <code>log.Logger</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | What little code is affected will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="mime">The mime package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <a href="/pkg/mime/#FormatMediaType"><code>FormatMediaType</code></a> function | 
|  | of the <code>mime</code> package has  been simplified to make it | 
|  | consistent with | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/mime/#ParseMediaType"><code>ParseMediaType</code></a>. | 
|  | It now takes <code>"text/html"</code> rather than <code>"text"</code> and <code>"html"</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | What little code is affected will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="net">The net package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the various <code>SetTimeout</code>, | 
|  | <code>SetReadTimeout</code>, and <code>SetWriteTimeout</code> methods | 
|  | have been replaced with | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/net/#IPConn.SetDeadline"><code>SetDeadline</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/net/#IPConn.SetReadDeadline"><code>SetReadDeadline</code></a>, and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/net/#IPConn.SetWriteDeadline"><code>SetWriteDeadline</code></a>, | 
|  | respectively.  Rather than taking a timeout value in nanoseconds that | 
|  | apply to any activity on the connection, the new methods set an | 
|  | absolute deadline (as a <code>time.Time</code> value) after which | 
|  | reads and writes will time out and no longer block. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | There are also new functions | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/net/#DialTimeout"><code>net.DialTimeout</code></a> | 
|  | to simplify timing out dialing a network address and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/net/#ListenMulticastUDP"><code>net.ListenMulticastUDP</code></a> | 
|  | to allow multicast UDP to listen concurrently across multiple listeners. | 
|  | The <code>net.ListenMulticastUDP</code> function replaces the old | 
|  | <code>JoinGroup</code> and <code>LeaveGroup</code> methods. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses the old methods will fail to compile and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | The semantic change makes it difficult for the fix tool to update automatically. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="os">The os package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Time</code> function has been removed; callers should use | 
|  | the <a href="/pkg/time/#Time"><code>Time</code></a> type from the | 
|  | <code>time</code> package. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Exec</code> function has been removed; callers should use | 
|  | <code>Exec</code> from the <code>syscall</code> package, where available. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>ShellExpand</code> function has been renamed to <a | 
|  | href="/pkg/os/#ExpandEnv"><code>ExpandEnv</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/os/#NewFile"><code>NewFile</code></a> function | 
|  | now takes a <code>uintptr</code> fd, instead of an <code>int</code>. | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/os/#File.Fd"><code>Fd</code></a> method on files now | 
|  | also returns a <code>uintptr</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | There are no longer error constants such as <code>EINVAL</code> | 
|  | in the <code>os</code> package, since the set of values varied with | 
|  | the underlying operating system. There are new portable functions like | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#IsPermission"><code>IsPermission</code></a> | 
|  | to test common error properties, plus a few new error values | 
|  | with more Go-like names, such as | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#ErrPermission"><code>ErrPermission</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#ErrNotExist"><code>ErrNotExist</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Getenverror</code> function has been removed. To distinguish | 
|  | between a non-existent environment variable and an empty string, | 
|  | use <a href="/pkg/os/#Environ"><code>os.Environ</code></a> or | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/syscall/#Getenv"><code>syscall.Getenv</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/os/#Process.Wait"><code>Process.Wait</code></a> method has | 
|  | dropped its option argument and the associated constants are gone | 
|  | from the package. | 
|  | Also, the function <code>Wait</code> is gone; only the method of | 
|  | the <code>Process</code> type persists. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Waitmsg</code> type returned by | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#Process.Wait"><code>Process.Wait</code></a> | 
|  | has been replaced with a more portable | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#ProcessState"><code>ProcessState</code></a> | 
|  | type with accessor methods to recover information about the | 
|  | process. | 
|  | Because of changes to <code>Wait</code>, the <code>ProcessState</code> | 
|  | value always describes an exited process. | 
|  | Portability concerns simplified the interface in other ways, but the values returned by the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#ProcessState.Sys"><code>ProcessState.Sys</code></a> and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#ProcessState.SysUsage"><code>ProcessState.SysUsage</code></a> | 
|  | methods can be type-asserted to underlying system-specific data structures such as | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/syscall/#WaitStatus"><code>syscall.WaitStatus</code></a> and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/syscall/#Rusage"><code>syscall.Rusage</code></a> on Unix. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will drop a zero argument to <code>Process.Wait</code>. | 
|  | All other changes will be caught by the compiler and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h4 id="os_fileinfo">The os.FileInfo type</h4> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 redefines the <a href="/pkg/os/#FileInfo"><code>os.FileInfo</code></a> type, | 
|  | changing it from a struct to an interface: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | type FileInfo interface { | 
|  | Name() string       // base name of the file | 
|  | Size() int64        // length in bytes | 
|  | Mode() FileMode     // file mode bits | 
|  | ModTime() time.Time // modification time | 
|  | IsDir() bool        // abbreviation for Mode().IsDir() | 
|  | Sys() interface{}   // underlying data source (can return nil) | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The file mode information has been moved into a subtype called | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#FileMode"><code>os.FileMode</code></a>, | 
|  | a simple integer type with <code>IsDir</code>, <code>Perm</code>, and <code>String</code> | 
|  | methods. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The system-specific details of file modes and properties such as (on Unix) | 
|  | i-number have been removed from <code>FileInfo</code> altogether. | 
|  | Instead, each operating system's <code>os</code> package provides an | 
|  | implementation of the <code>FileInfo</code> interface, which | 
|  | has a <code>Sys</code> method that returns the | 
|  | system-specific representation of file metadata. | 
|  | For instance, to discover the i-number of a file on a Unix system, unpack | 
|  | the <code>FileInfo</code> like this: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | fi, err := os.Stat("hello.go") | 
|  | if err != nil { | 
|  | log.Fatal(err) | 
|  | } | 
|  | // Check that it's a Unix file. | 
|  | unixStat, ok := fi.Sys().(*syscall.Stat_t) | 
|  | if !ok { | 
|  | log.Fatal("hello.go: not a Unix file") | 
|  | } | 
|  | fmt.Printf("file i-number: %d\n", unixStat.Ino) | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Assuming (which is unwise) that <code>"hello.go"</code> is a Unix file, | 
|  | the i-number expression could be contracted to | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | fi.Sys().(*syscall.Stat_t).Ino | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The vast majority of uses of <code>FileInfo</code> need only the methods | 
|  | of the standard interface. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>os</code> package no longer contains wrappers for the POSIX errors | 
|  | such as <code>ENOENT</code>. | 
|  | For the few programs that need to verify particular error conditions, there are | 
|  | now the boolean functions | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#IsExist"><code>IsExist</code></a>, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#IsNotExist"><code>IsNotExist</code></a> | 
|  | and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/os/#IsPermission"><code>IsPermission</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/os\.Open/` `/}/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update code that uses the old equivalent of the current <code>os.FileInfo</code> | 
|  | and <code>os.FileMode</code> API. | 
|  | Code that needs system-specific file details will need to be updated by hand. | 
|  | Code that uses the old POSIX error values from the <code>os</code> package | 
|  | will fail to compile and will also need to be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="os_signal">The os/signal package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>os/signal</code> package in Go 1 replaces the | 
|  | <code>Incoming</code> function, which returned a channel | 
|  | that received all incoming signals, | 
|  | with the selective <code>Notify</code> function, which asks | 
|  | for delivery of specific signals on an existing channel. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code must be updated by hand. | 
|  | A literal translation of | 
|  | </p> | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | c := signal.Incoming() | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | is | 
|  | </p> | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | c := make(chan os.Signal, 1) | 
|  | signal.Notify(c) // ask for all signals | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | but most code should list the specific signals it wants to handle instead: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | c := make(chan os.Signal, 1) | 
|  | signal.Notify(c, syscall.SIGHUP, syscall.SIGQUIT) | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="path_filepath">The path/filepath package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <a href="/pkg/path/filepath/#Walk"><code>Walk</code></a> function of the | 
|  | <code>path/filepath</code> package | 
|  | has been changed to take a function value of type | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/path/filepath/#WalkFunc"><code>WalkFunc</code></a> | 
|  | instead of a <code>Visitor</code> interface value. | 
|  | <code>WalkFunc</code> unifies the handling of both files and directories. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | type WalkFunc func(path string, info os.FileInfo, err error) error | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>WalkFunc</code> function will be called even for files or directories that could not be opened; | 
|  | in such cases the error argument will describe the failure. | 
|  | If a directory's contents are to be skipped, | 
|  | the function should return the value <a href="/pkg/path/filepath/#pkg-variables"><code>filepath.SkipDir</code></a> | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/STARTWALK/` `/ENDWALK/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | The change simplifies most code but has subtle consequences, so affected programs | 
|  | will need to be updated by hand. | 
|  | The compiler will catch code using the old interface. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="regexp">The regexp package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/regexp/"><code>regexp</code></a> package has been rewritten. | 
|  | It has the same interface but the specification of the regular expressions | 
|  | it supports has changed from the old "egrep" form to that of | 
|  | <a href="//code.google.com/p/re2/">RE2</a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses the package should have its regular expressions checked by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="runtime">The runtime package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, much of the API exported by package | 
|  | <code>runtime</code> has been removed in favor of | 
|  | functionality provided by other packages. | 
|  | Code using the <code>runtime.Type</code> interface | 
|  | or its specific concrete type implementations should | 
|  | now use package <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a>. | 
|  | Code using <code>runtime.Semacquire</code> or <code>runtime.Semrelease</code> | 
|  | should use channels or the abstractions in package <a href="/pkg/sync/"><code>sync</code></a>. | 
|  | The <code>runtime.Alloc</code>, <code>runtime.Free</code>, | 
|  | and <code>runtime.Lookup</code> functions, an unsafe API created for | 
|  | debugging the memory allocator, have no replacement. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Before, <code>runtime.MemStats</code> was a global variable holding | 
|  | statistics about memory allocation, and calls to <code>runtime.UpdateMemStats</code> | 
|  | ensured that it was up to date. | 
|  | In Go 1, <code>runtime.MemStats</code> is a struct type, and code should use | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/runtime/#ReadMemStats"><code>runtime.ReadMemStats</code></a> | 
|  | to obtain the current statistics. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The package adds a new function, | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/runtime/#NumCPU"><code>runtime.NumCPU</code></a>, that returns the number of CPUs available | 
|  | for parallel execution, as reported by the operating system kernel. | 
|  | Its value can inform the setting of <code>GOMAXPROCS</code>. | 
|  | The <code>runtime.Cgocalls</code> and <code>runtime.Goroutines</code> functions | 
|  | have been renamed to <code>runtime.NumCgoCall</code> and <code>runtime.NumGoroutine</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update code for the function renamings. | 
|  | Other code will need to be updated by hand. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="strconv">The strconv package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/strconv/"><code>strconv</code></a> | 
|  | package has been significantly reworked to make it more Go-like and less C-like, | 
|  | although <code>Atoi</code> lives on (it's similar to | 
|  | <code>int(ParseInt(x, 10, 0))</code>, as does | 
|  | <code>Itoa(x)</code> (<code>FormatInt(int64(x), 10)</code>). | 
|  | There are also new variants of some of the functions that append to byte slices rather than | 
|  | return strings, to allow control over allocation. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | This table summarizes the renamings; see the | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/strconv/">package documentation</a> | 
|  | for full details. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <table class="codetable" frame="border" summary="strconv renames"> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="50%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <colgroup align="left" width="50%"></colgroup> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <th align="left">Old call</th> | 
|  | <th align="left">New call</th> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atob(x)</td> <td>ParseBool(x)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atof32(x)</td> <td>ParseFloat(x, 32)§</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atof64(x)</td> <td>ParseFloat(x, 64)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>AtofN(x, n)</td> <td>ParseFloat(x, n)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atoi(x)</td> <td>Atoi(x)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atoi(x)</td> <td>ParseInt(x, 10, 0)§</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atoi64(x)</td> <td>ParseInt(x, 10, 64)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atoui(x)</td> <td>ParseUint(x, 10, 0)§</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Atoui64(x)</td> <td>ParseUint(x, 10, 64)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Btoi64(x, b)</td> <td>ParseInt(x, b, 64)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Btoui64(x, b)</td> <td>ParseUint(x, b, 64)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Btoa(x)</td> <td>FormatBool(x)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Ftoa32(x, f, p)</td> <td>FormatFloat(float64(x), f, p, 32)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Ftoa64(x, f, p)</td> <td>FormatFloat(x, f, p, 64)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>FtoaN(x, f, p, n)</td> <td>FormatFloat(x, f, p, n)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Itoa(x)</td> <td>Itoa(x)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Itoa(x)</td> <td>FormatInt(int64(x), 10)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Itoa64(x)</td> <td>FormatInt(x, 10)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Itob(x, b)</td> <td>FormatInt(int64(x), b)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Itob64(x, b)</td> <td>FormatInt(x, b)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Uitoa(x)</td> <td>FormatUint(uint64(x), 10)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Uitoa64(x)</td> <td>FormatUint(x, 10)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr> | 
|  | <td colspan="2"><hr></td> | 
|  | </tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Uitob(x, b)</td> <td>FormatUint(uint64(x), b)</td></tr> | 
|  | <tr><td>Uitob64(x, b)</td> <td>FormatUint(x, b)</td></tr> | 
|  | </table> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Running <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> will update almost all code affected by the change. | 
|  | <br> | 
|  | § <code>Atoi</code> persists but <code>Atoui</code> and <code>Atof32</code> do not, so | 
|  | they may require | 
|  | a cast that must be added by hand; the <code>go</code> <code>fix</code> tool will warn about it. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="templates">The template packages</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>template</code> and <code>exp/template/html</code> packages have moved to | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/text/template/"><code>text/template</code></a> and | 
|  | <a href="/pkg/html/template/"><code>html/template</code></a>. | 
|  | More significant, the interface to these packages has been simplified. | 
|  | The template language is the same, but the concept of "template set" is gone | 
|  | and the functions and methods of the packages have changed accordingly, | 
|  | often by elimination. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Instead of sets, a <code>Template</code> object | 
|  | may contain multiple named template definitions, | 
|  | in effect constructing | 
|  | name spaces for template invocation. | 
|  | A template can invoke any other template associated with it, but only those | 
|  | templates associated with it. | 
|  | The simplest way to associate templates is to parse them together, something | 
|  | made easier with the new structure of the packages. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | The imports will be updated by fix tool. | 
|  | Single-template uses will be otherwise be largely unaffected. | 
|  | Code that uses multiple templates in concert will need to be updated by hand. | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/text/template/#pkg-examples">examples</a> in | 
|  | the documentation for <code>text/template</code> can provide guidance. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="testing">The testing package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The testing package has a type, <code>B</code>, passed as an argument to benchmark functions. | 
|  | In Go 1, <code>B</code> has new methods, analogous to those of <code>T</code>, enabling | 
|  | logging and failure reporting. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | {{code "/doc/progs/go1.go" `/func.*Benchmark/` `/^}/`}} | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Existing code is unaffected, although benchmarks that use <code>println</code> | 
|  | or <code>panic</code> should be updated to use the new methods. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="testing_script">The testing/script package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The testing/script package has been deleted. It was a dreg. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | No code is likely to be affected. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="unsafe">The unsafe package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the functions | 
|  | <code>unsafe.Typeof</code>, <code>unsafe.Reflect</code>, | 
|  | <code>unsafe.Unreflect</code>, <code>unsafe.New</code>, and | 
|  | <code>unsafe.NewArray</code> have been removed; | 
|  | they duplicated safer functionality provided by | 
|  | package <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code using these functions must be rewritten to use | 
|  | package <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a>. | 
|  | The changes to <a href="//golang.org/change/2646dc956207">encoding/gob</a> and the <a href="//code.google.com/p/goprotobuf/source/detail?r=5340ad310031">protocol buffer library</a> | 
|  | may be helpful as examples. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h3 id="url">The url package</h3> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1 several fields from the <a href="/pkg/net/url/#URL"><code>url.URL</code></a> type | 
|  | were removed or replaced. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <a href="/pkg/net/url/#URL.String"><code>String</code></a> method now | 
|  | predictably rebuilds an encoded URL string using all of <code>URL</code>'s | 
|  | fields as necessary. The resulting string will also no longer have | 
|  | passwords escaped. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>Raw</code> field has been removed. In most cases the <code>String</code> | 
|  | method may be used in its place. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The old <code>RawUserinfo</code> field is replaced by the <code>User</code> | 
|  | field, of type <a href="/pkg/net/url/#Userinfo"><code>*net.Userinfo</code></a>. | 
|  | Values of this type may be created using the new <a href="/pkg/net/url/#User"><code>net.User</code></a> | 
|  | and <a href="/pkg/net/url/#UserPassword"><code>net.UserPassword</code></a> | 
|  | functions. The <code>EscapeUserinfo</code> and <code>UnescapeUserinfo</code> | 
|  | functions are also gone. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>RawAuthority</code> field has been removed. The same information is | 
|  | available in the <code>Host</code> and <code>User</code> fields. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>RawPath</code> field and the <code>EncodedPath</code> method have | 
|  | been removed. The path information in rooted URLs (with a slash following the | 
|  | schema) is now available only in decoded form in the <code>Path</code> field. | 
|  | Occasionally, the encoded data may be required to obtain information that | 
|  | was lost in the decoding process. These cases must be handled by accessing | 
|  | the data the URL was built from. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | URLs with non-rooted paths, such as <code>"mailto:dev@golang.org?subject=Hi"</code>, | 
|  | are also handled differently. The <code>OpaquePath</code> boolean field has been | 
|  | removed and a new <code>Opaque</code> string field introduced to hold the encoded | 
|  | path for such URLs. In Go 1, the cited URL parses as: | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <pre> | 
|  | URL{ | 
|  | Scheme: "mailto", | 
|  | Opaque: "dev@golang.org", | 
|  | RawQuery: "subject=Hi", | 
|  | } | 
|  | </pre> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | A new <a href="/pkg/net/url/#URL.RequestURI"><code>RequestURI</code></a> method was | 
|  | added to <code>URL</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | The <code>ParseWithReference</code> function has been renamed to <code>ParseWithFragment</code>. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Code that uses the old fields will fail to compile and must be updated by hand. | 
|  | The semantic changes make it difficult for the fix tool to update automatically. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="cmd_go">The go command</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | Go 1 introduces the <a href="/cmd/go/">go command</a>, a tool for fetching, | 
|  | building, and installing Go packages and commands. The <code>go</code> command | 
|  | does away with makefiles, instead using Go source code to find dependencies and | 
|  | determine build conditions. Most existing Go programs will no longer require | 
|  | makefiles to be built. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | See <a href="/doc/code.html">How to Write Go Code</a> for a primer on the | 
|  | <code>go</code> command and the <a href="/cmd/go/">go command documentation</a> | 
|  | for the full details. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | <em>Updating</em>: | 
|  | Projects that depend on the Go project's old makefile-based build | 
|  | infrastructure (<code>Make.pkg</code>, <code>Make.cmd</code>, and so on) should | 
|  | switch to using the <code>go</code> command for building Go code and, if | 
|  | necessary, rewrite their makefiles to perform any auxiliary build tasks. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="cmd_cgo">The cgo command</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | In Go 1, the <a href="/cmd/cgo">cgo command</a> | 
|  | uses a different <code>_cgo_export.h</code> | 
|  | file, which is generated for packages containing <code>//export</code> lines. | 
|  | The <code>_cgo_export.h</code> file now begins with the C preamble comment, | 
|  | so that exported function definitions can use types defined there. | 
|  | This has the effect of compiling the preamble multiple times, so a | 
|  | package using <code>//export</code> must not put function definitions | 
|  | or variable initializations in the C preamble. | 
|  | </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2 id="releases">Packaged releases</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p> | 
|  | One of the most significant changes associated with Go 1 is the availability | 
|  | of prepackaged, downloadable distributions. | 
|  | They are available for many combinations of architecture and operating system | 
|  | (including Windows) and the list will grow. | 
|  | Installation details are described on the | 
|  | <a href="/doc/install">Getting Started</a> page, while | 
|  | the distributions themselves are listed on the | 
|  | <a href="/dl/">downloads page</a>. |