| <!--{ |
| "Title": "Go 1.6 Release Notes" |
| }--> |
| |
| <!-- |
| Edit .,s;^PKG:([a-z][A-Za-z0-9_/]+);<a href="/pkg/\1/"><code>\1</code></a>;g |
| Edit .,s;^([a-z][A-Za-z0-9_/]+)\.([A-Z][A-Za-z0-9_]+\.)?([A-Z][A-Za-z0-9_]+)([ .',]|$);<a href="/pkg/\1/#\2\3"><code>\3</code></a>\4;g |
| --> |
| |
| <style> |
| main ul li { margin: 0.5em 0; } |
| </style> |
| |
| <h2 id="introduction">Introduction to Go 1.6</h2> |
| |
| <p> |
| The latest Go release, version 1.6, arrives six months after 1.5. |
| Most of its changes are in the implementation of the language, runtime, and libraries. |
| There are no changes to the language specification. |
| As always, the release maintains the Go 1 <a href="/doc/go1compat.html">promise of compatibility</a>. |
| We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The release adds new ports to <a href="#ports">Linux on 64-bit MIPS and Android on 32-bit x86</a>; |
| defined and enforced <a href="#cgo">rules for sharing Go pointers with C</a>; |
| transparent, automatic <a href="#http2">support for HTTP/2</a>; |
| and a new mechanism for <a href="#template">template reuse</a>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h2 id="language">Changes to the language</h2> |
| |
| <p> |
| There are no language changes in this release. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h2 id="ports">Ports</h2> |
| |
| <p> |
| Go 1.6 adds experimental ports to |
| Linux on 64-bit MIPS (<code>linux/mips64</code> and <code>linux/mips64le</code>). |
| These ports support <code>cgo</code> but only with internal linking. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Go 1.6 also adds an experimental port to Android on 32-bit x86 (<code>android/386</code>). |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| On FreeBSD, Go 1.6 defaults to using <code>clang</code>, not <code>gcc</code>, as the external C compiler. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| On Linux on little-endian 64-bit PowerPC (<code>linux/ppc64le</code>), |
| Go 1.6 now supports <code>cgo</code> with external linking and |
| is roughly feature complete. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| On NaCl, Go 1.5 required SDK version pepper-41. |
| Go 1.6 adds support for later SDK versions. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| On 32-bit x86 systems using the <code>-dynlink</code> or <code>-shared</code> compilation modes, |
| the register CX is now overwritten by certain memory references and should |
| be avoided in hand-written assembly. |
| See the <a href="/doc/asm#x86">assembly documentation</a> for details. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h2 id="tools">Tools</h2> |
| |
| <h3 id="cgo">Cgo</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| There is one major change to <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a>, along with one minor change. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The major change is the definition of rules for sharing Go pointers with C code, |
| to ensure that such C code can coexist with Go's garbage collector. |
| Briefly, Go and C may share memory allocated by Go |
| when a pointer to that memory is passed to C as part of a <code>cgo</code> call, |
| provided that the memory itself contains no pointers to Go-allocated memory, |
| and provided that C does not retain the pointer after the call returns. |
| These rules are checked by the runtime during program execution: |
| if the runtime detects a violation, it prints a diagnosis and crashes the program. |
| The checks can be disabled by setting the environment variable |
| <code>GODEBUG=cgocheck=0</code>, but note that the vast majority of |
| code identified by the checks is subtly incompatible with garbage collection |
| in one way or another. |
| Disabling the checks will typically only lead to more mysterious failure modes. |
| Fixing the code in question should be strongly preferred |
| over turning off the checks. |
| See the <a href="/cmd/cgo/#hdr-Passing_pointers"><code>cgo</code> documentation</a> for more details. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The minor change is |
| the addition of explicit <code>C.complexfloat</code> and <code>C.complexdouble</code> types, |
| separate from Go's <code>complex64</code> and <code>complex128</code>. |
| Matching the other numeric types, C's complex types and Go's complex type are |
| no longer interchangeable. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="compiler">Compiler Toolchain</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| The compiler toolchain is mostly unchanged. |
| Internally, the most significant change is that the parser is now hand-written |
| instead of generated from <a href="/cmd/yacc/">yacc</a>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The compiler, linker, and <code>go</code> command have a new flag <code>-msan</code>, |
| analogous to <code>-race</code> and only available on linux/amd64, |
| that enables interoperation with the <a href="https://clang.llvm.org/docs/MemorySanitizer.html">Clang MemorySanitizer</a>. |
| Such interoperation is useful mainly for testing a program containing suspect C or C++ code. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The linker has a new option <code>-libgcc</code> to set the expected location |
| of the C compiler support library when linking <a href="/cmd/cgo/"><code>cgo</code></a> code. |
| The option is only consulted when using <code>-linkmode=internal</code>, |
| and it may be set to <code>none</code> to disable the use of a support library. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The implementation of <a href="/doc/go1.5#link">build modes started in Go 1.5</a> has been expanded to more systems. |
| This release adds support for the <code>c-shared</code> mode on <code>android/386</code>, <code>android/amd64</code>, |
| <code>android/arm64</code>, <code>linux/386</code>, and <code>linux/arm64</code>; |
| for the <code>shared</code> mode on <code>linux/386</code>, <code>linux/arm</code>, <code>linux/amd64</code>, and <code>linux/ppc64le</code>; |
| and for the new <code>pie</code> mode (generating position-independent executables) on |
| <code>android/386</code>, <code>android/amd64</code>, <code>android/arm</code>, <code>android/arm64</code>, <code>linux/386</code>, |
| <code>linux/amd64</code>, <code>linux/arm</code>, <code>linux/arm64</code>, and <code>linux/ppc64le</code>. |
| See the <a href="/s/execmodes">design document</a> for details. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| As a reminder, the linker's <code>-X</code> flag changed in Go 1.5. |
| In Go 1.4 and earlier, it took two arguments, as in |
| </p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| -X importpath.name value |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p> |
| Go 1.5 added an alternative syntax using a single argument |
| that is itself a <code>name=value</code> pair: |
| </p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| -X importpath.name=value |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p> |
| In Go 1.5 the old syntax was still accepted, after printing a warning |
| suggesting use of the new syntax instead. |
| Go 1.6 continues to accept the old syntax and print the warning. |
| Go 1.7 will remove support for the old syntax. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="gccgo">Gccgo</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| The release schedules for the GCC and Go projects do not coincide. |
| GCC release 5 contains the Go 1.4 version of gccgo. |
| The next release, GCC 6, will have the Go 1.6.1 version of gccgo. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="go_command">Go command</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| The <a href="/cmd/go"><code>go</code></a> command's basic operation |
| is unchanged, but there are a number of changes worth noting. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Go 1.5 introduced experimental support for vendoring, |
| enabled by setting the <code>GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT</code> environment variable to <code>1</code>. |
| Go 1.6 keeps the vendoring support, no longer considered experimental, |
| and enables it by default. |
| It can be disabled explicitly by setting |
| the <code>GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT</code> environment variable to <code>0</code>. |
| Go 1.7 will remove support for the environment variable. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The most likely problem caused by enabling vendoring by default happens |
| in source trees containing an existing directory named <code>vendor</code> that |
| does not expect to be interpreted according to new vendoring semantics. |
| In this case, the simplest fix is to rename the directory to anything other |
| than <code>vendor</code> and update any affected import paths. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| For details about vendoring, |
| see the documentation for the <a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Vendor_Directories"><code>go</code> command</a> |
| and the <a href="/s/go15vendor">design document</a>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| There is a new build flag, <code>-msan</code>, |
| that compiles Go with support for the LLVM memory sanitizer. |
| This is intended mainly for use when linking against C or C++ code |
| that is being checked with the memory sanitizer. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="doc_command">Go doc command</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| Go 1.5 introduced the |
| <a href="/cmd/go/#hdr-Show_documentation_for_package_or_symbol"><code>go doc</code></a> command, |
| which allows references to packages using only the package name, as in |
| <code>go</code> <code>doc</code> <code>http</code>. |
| In the event of ambiguity, the Go 1.5 behavior was to use the package |
| with the lexicographically earliest import path. |
| In Go 1.6, ambiguity is resolved by preferring import paths with |
| fewer elements, breaking ties using lexicographic comparison. |
| An important effect of this change is that original copies of packages |
| are now preferred over vendored copies. |
| Successful searches also tend to run faster. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="vet_command">Go vet command</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| The <a href="/cmd/vet"><code>go vet</code></a> command now diagnoses |
| passing function or method values as arguments to <code>Printf</code>, |
| such as when passing <code>f</code> where <code>f()</code> was intended. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h2 id="performance">Performance</h2> |
| |
| <p> |
| As always, the changes are so general and varied that precise statements |
| about performance are difficult to make. |
| Some programs may run faster, some slower. |
| On average the programs in the Go 1 benchmark suite run a few percent faster in Go 1.6 |
| than they did in Go 1.5. |
| The garbage collector's pauses are even lower than in Go 1.5, |
| especially for programs using |
| a large amount of memory. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| There have been significant optimizations bringing more than 10% improvements |
| to implementations of the |
| <a href="/pkg/compress/bzip2/"><code>compress/bzip2</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/compress/gzip/"><code>compress/gzip</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/aes/"><code>crypto/aes</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/elliptic/"><code>crypto/elliptic</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/ecdsa/"><code>crypto/ecdsa</code></a>, and |
| <a href="/pkg/sort/"><code>sort</code></a> packages. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h2 id="library">Core library</h2> |
| |
| <h3 id="http2">HTTP/2</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| Go 1.6 adds transparent support in the |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package |
| for the new <a href="https://http2.github.io/">HTTP/2 protocol</a>. |
| Go clients and servers will automatically use HTTP/2 as appropriate when using HTTPS. |
| There is no exported API specific to details of the HTTP/2 protocol handling, |
| just as there is no exported API specific to HTTP/1.1. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Programs that must disable HTTP/2 can do so by setting |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport.TLSNextProto</code></a> (for clients) |
| or |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>Server.TLSNextProto</code></a> (for servers) |
| to a non-nil, empty map. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Programs that must adjust HTTP/2 protocol-specific details can import and use |
| <a href="/x/net/http2"><code>golang.org/x/net/http2</code></a>, |
| in particular its |
| <a href="https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/net/http2/#ConfigureServer">ConfigureServer</a> |
| and |
| <a href="https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/net/http2/#ConfigureTransport">ConfigureTransport</a> |
| functions. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="runtime">Runtime</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| The runtime has added lightweight, best-effort detection of concurrent misuse of maps. |
| As always, if one goroutine is writing to a map, no other goroutine should be |
| reading or writing the map concurrently. |
| If the runtime detects this condition, it prints a diagnosis and crashes the program. |
| The best way to find out more about the problem is to run the program |
| under the |
| <a href="https://blog.golang.org/race-detector">race detector</a>, |
| which will more reliably identify the race |
| and give more detail. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| For program-ending panics, the runtime now by default |
| prints only the stack of the running goroutine, |
| not all existing goroutines. |
| Usually only the current goroutine is relevant to a panic, |
| so omitting the others significantly reduces irrelevant output |
| in a crash message. |
| To see the stacks from all goroutines in crash messages, set the environment variable |
| <code>GOTRACEBACK</code> to <code>all</code> |
| or call |
| <a href="/pkg/runtime/debug/#SetTraceback"><code>debug.SetTraceback</code></a> |
| before the crash, and rerun the program. |
| See the <a href="/pkg/runtime/#hdr-Environment_Variables">runtime documentation</a> for details. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <em>Updating</em>: |
| Uncaught panics intended to dump the state of the entire program, |
| such as when a timeout is detected or when explicitly handling a received signal, |
| should now call <code>debug.SetTraceback("all")</code> before panicking. |
| Searching for uses of |
| <a href="/pkg/os/signal/#Notify"><code>signal.Notify</code></a> may help identify such code. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| On Windows, Go programs in Go 1.5 and earlier forced |
| the global Windows timer resolution to 1ms at startup |
| by calling <code>timeBeginPeriod(1)</code>. |
| Go no longer needs this for good scheduler performance, |
| and changing the global timer resolution caused problems on some systems, |
| so the call has been removed. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| When using <code>-buildmode=c-archive</code> or |
| <code>-buildmode=c-shared</code> to build an archive or a shared |
| library, the handling of signals has changed. |
| In Go 1.5 the archive or shared library would install a signal handler |
| for most signals. |
| In Go 1.6 it will only install a signal handler for the |
| synchronous signals needed to handle run-time panics in Go code: |
| SIGBUS, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV. |
| See the <a href="/pkg/os/signal">os/signal</a> package for more |
| details. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="reflect">Reflect</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| The |
| <a href="/pkg/reflect/"><code>reflect</code></a> package has |
| <a href="/issue/12367">resolved a long-standing incompatibility</a> |
| between the gc and gccgo toolchains |
| regarding embedded unexported struct types containing exported fields. |
| Code that walks data structures using reflection, especially to implement |
| serialization in the spirit |
| of the |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> and |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> packages, |
| may need to be updated. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The problem arises when using reflection to walk through |
| an embedded unexported struct-typed field |
| into an exported field of that struct. |
| In this case, <code>reflect</code> had incorrectly reported |
| the embedded field as exported, by returning an empty <code>Field.PkgPath</code>. |
| Now it correctly reports the field as unexported |
| but ignores that fact when evaluating access to exported fields |
| contained within the struct. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <em>Updating</em>: |
| Typically, code that previously walked over structs and used |
| </p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| f.PkgPath != "" |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p> |
| to exclude inaccessible fields |
| should now use |
| </p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| f.PkgPath != "" && !f.Anonymous |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p> |
| For example, see the changes to the implementations of |
| <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/#/c/14011/2/src/encoding/json/encode.go"><code>encoding/json</code></a> and |
| <a href="https://go-review.googlesource.com/#/c/14012/2/src/encoding/xml/typeinfo.go"><code>encoding/xml</code></a>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="sort">Sorting</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| In the |
| <a href="/pkg/sort/"><code>sort</code></a> |
| package, |
| the implementation of |
| <a href="/pkg/sort/#Sort"><code>Sort</code></a> |
| has been rewritten to make about 10% fewer calls to the |
| <a href="/pkg/sort/#Interface"><code>Interface</code></a>'s |
| <code>Less</code> and <code>Swap</code> |
| methods, with a corresponding overall time savings. |
| The new algorithm does choose a different ordering than before |
| for values that compare equal (those pairs for which <code>Less(i,</code> <code>j)</code> and <code>Less(j,</code> <code>i)</code> are false). |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <em>Updating</em>: |
| The definition of <code>Sort</code> makes no guarantee about the final order of equal values, |
| but the new behavior may still break programs that expect a specific order. |
| Such programs should either refine their <code>Less</code> implementations |
| to report the desired order |
| or should switch to |
| <a href="/pkg/sort/#Stable"><code>Stable</code></a>, |
| which preserves the original input order |
| of equal values. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="template">Templates</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| In the |
| <a href="/pkg/text/template/">text/template</a> package, |
| there are two significant new features to make writing templates easier. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| First, it is now possible to <a href="/pkg/text/template/#hdr-Text_and_spaces">trim spaces around template actions</a>, |
| which can make template definitions more readable. |
| A minus sign at the beginning of an action says to trim space before the action, |
| and a minus sign at the end of an action says to trim space after the action. |
| For example, the template |
| </p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| {{23 -}} |
| < |
| {{- 45}} |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p> |
| formats as <code>23<45</code>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Second, the new <a href="/pkg/text/template/#hdr-Actions"><code>{{block}}</code> action</a>, |
| combined with allowing redefinition of named templates, |
| provides a simple way to define pieces of a template that |
| can be replaced in different instantiations. |
| There is <a href="/pkg/text/template/#example_Template_block">an example</a> |
| in the <code>text/template</code> package that demonstrates this new feature. |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3 id="minor_library_changes">Minor changes to the library</h3> |
| |
| <ul> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/archive/tar/"><code>archive/tar</code></a> package's |
| implementation corrects many bugs in rare corner cases of the file format. |
| One visible change is that the |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/tar/#Reader"><code>Reader</code></a> type's |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/tar/#Reader.Read"><code>Read</code></a> method |
| now presents the content of special file types as being empty, |
| returning <code>io.EOF</code> immediately. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| In the <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/"><code>archive/zip</code></a> package, the |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Reader"><code>Reader</code></a> type now has a |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Reader.RegisterDecompressor"><code>RegisterDecompressor</code></a> method, |
| and the |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer"><code>Writer</code></a> type now has a |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#Writer.RegisterCompressor"><code>RegisterCompressor</code></a> method, |
| enabling control over compression options for individual zip files. |
| These take precedence over the pre-existing global |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#RegisterDecompressor"><code>RegisterDecompressor</code></a> and |
| <a href="/pkg/archive/zip/#RegisterCompressor"><code>RegisterCompressor</code></a> functions. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/bufio/"><code>bufio</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/bufio/#Scanner"><code>Scanner</code></a> type now has a |
| <a href="/pkg/bufio/#Scanner.Buffer"><code>Buffer</code></a> method, |
| to specify an initial buffer and maximum buffer size to use during scanning. |
| This makes it possible, when needed, to scan tokens larger than |
| <code>MaxScanTokenSize</code>. |
| Also for the <code>Scanner</code>, the package now defines the |
| <a href="/pkg/bufio/#ErrFinalToken"><code>ErrFinalToken</code></a> error value, for use by |
| <a href="/pkg/bufio/#SplitFunc">split functions</a> to abort processing or to return a final empty token. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/"><code>compress/flate</code></a> package |
| has deprecated its |
| <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/#ReadError"><code>ReadError</code></a> and |
| <a href="/pkg/compress/flate/#WriteError"><code>WriteError</code></a> error implementations. |
| In Go 1.5 they were only rarely returned when an error was encountered; |
| now they are never returned, although they remain defined for compatibility. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <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> packages |
| now report |
| <a href="/pkg/io/#ErrUnexpectedEOF"><code>io.ErrUnexpectedEOF</code></a> for truncated input streams, instead of |
| <a href="/pkg/io/#EOF"><code>io.EOF</code></a>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/crypto/cipher/"><code>crypto/cipher</code></a> package now |
| overwrites the destination buffer in the event of a GCM decryption failure. |
| This is to allow the AESNI code to avoid using a temporary buffer. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/"><code>crypto/tls</code></a> package |
| has a variety of minor changes. |
| It now allows |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#Listen"><code>Listen</code></a> |
| to succeed when the |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config"><code>Config</code></a> |
| has a nil <code>Certificates</code>, as long as the <code>GetCertificate</code> callback is set, |
| it adds support for RSA with AES-GCM cipher suites, |
| and |
| it adds a |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/tls/#RecordHeaderError"><code>RecordHeaderError</code></a> |
| to allow clients (in particular, the <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package) |
| to report a better error when attempting a TLS connection to a non-TLS server. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/"><code>crypto/x509</code></a> package |
| now permits certificates to contain negative serial numbers |
| (technically an error, but unfortunately common in practice), |
| and it defines a new |
| <a href="/pkg/crypto/x509/#InsecureAlgorithmError"><code>InsecureAlgorithmError</code></a> |
| to give a better error message when rejecting a certificate |
| signed with an insecure algorithm like MD5. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/debug/dwarf"><code>debug/dwarf</code></a> and |
| <a href="/pkg/debug/elf/"><code>debug/elf</code></a> packages |
| together add support for compressed DWARF sections. |
| User code needs no updating: the sections are decompressed automatically when read. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/debug/elf/"><code>debug/elf</code></a> package |
| adds support for general compressed ELF sections. |
| User code needs no updating: the sections are decompressed automatically when read. |
| However, compressed |
| <a href="/pkg/debug/elf/#Section"><code>Sections</code></a> do not support random access: |
| they have a nil <code>ReaderAt</code> field. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/"><code>encoding/asn1</code></a> package |
| now exports |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/#pkg-constants">tag and class constants</a> |
| useful for advanced parsing of ASN.1 structures. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/"><code>encoding/asn1</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/asn1/#Unmarshal"><code>Unmarshal</code></a> now rejects various non-standard integer and length encodings. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/encoding/base64"><code>encoding/base64</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/base64/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a> has been fixed |
| to process the final bytes of its input. Previously it processed as many four-byte tokens as |
| possible but ignored the remainder, up to three bytes. |
| The <code>Decoder</code> therefore now handles inputs in unpadded encodings (like |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/base64/#RawURLEncoding">RawURLEncoding</a>) correctly, |
| but it also rejects inputs in padded encodings that are truncated or end with invalid bytes, |
| such as trailing spaces. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> package |
| now checks the syntax of a |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/#Number"><code>Number</code></a> |
| before marshaling it, requiring that it conforms to the JSON specification for numeric values. |
| As in previous releases, the zero <code>Number</code> (an empty string) is marshaled as a literal 0 (zero). |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Marshal"><code>Marshal</code></a> |
| function now supports a <code>cdata</code> attribute, such as <code>chardata</code> |
| but encoding its argument in one or more <code><![CDATA[ ... ]]></code> tags. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder"><code>Decoder</code></a>'s |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder.Token"><code>Token</code></a> method |
| now reports an error when encountering EOF before seeing all open tags closed, |
| consistent with its general requirement that tags in the input be properly matched. |
| To avoid that requirement, use |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/#Decoder.RawToken"><code>RawToken</code></a>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package now allows |
| any integer type as an argument to |
| <a href="/pkg/fmt/#Printf"><code>Printf</code></a>'s <code>*</code> width and precision specification. |
| In previous releases, the argument to <code>*</code> was required to have type <code>int</code>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/fmt/"><code>fmt</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/fmt/#Scanf"><code>Scanf</code></a> can now scan hexadecimal strings using %X, as an alias for %x. |
| Both formats accept any mix of upper- and lower-case hexadecimal. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/image/"><code>image</code></a> |
| and |
| <a href="/pkg/image/color/"><code>image/color</code></a> packages |
| add |
| <a href="/pkg/image/#NYCbCrA"><code>NYCbCrA</code></a> |
| and |
| <a href="/pkg/image/color/#NYCbCrA"><code>NYCbCrA</code></a> |
| types, to support Y'CbCr images with non-premultiplied alpha. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/io/"><code>io</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/io/#MultiWriter"><code>MultiWriter</code></a> |
| implementation now implements a <code>WriteString</code> method, |
| for use by |
| <a href="/pkg/io/#WriteString"><code>WriteString</code></a>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| In the <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int"><code>Int</code></a> adds |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int.Append"><code>Append</code></a> |
| and |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Int.Text"><code>Text</code></a> |
| methods to give more control over printing. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float"><code>Float</code></a> now implements |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextMarshaler"><code>encoding.TextMarshaler</code></a> and |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/#TextUnmarshaler"><code>encoding.TextUnmarshaler</code></a>, |
| allowing it to be serialized in a natural form by the |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/json/"><code>encoding/json</code></a> and |
| <a href="/pkg/encoding/xml/"><code>encoding/xml</code></a> packages. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float"><code>Float</code></a>'s |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float.Append"><code>Append</code></a> method now supports the special precision argument -1. |
| As in |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#ParseFloat"><code>strconv.ParseFloat</code></a>, |
| precision -1 means to use the smallest number of digits necessary such that |
| <a href="/pkg/math/big/#Float.Parse"><code>Parse</code></a> |
| reading the result into a <code>Float</code> of the same precision |
| will yield the original value. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/math/rand/"><code>math/rand</code></a> package |
| adds a |
| <a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Read"><code>Read</code></a> |
| function, and likewise |
| <a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Rand"><code>Rand</code></a> adds a |
| <a href="/pkg/math/rand/#Rand.Read"><code>Read</code></a> method. |
| These make it easier to generate pseudorandom test data. |
| Note that, like the rest of the package, |
| these should not be used in cryptographic settings; |
| for such purposes, use the <a href="/pkg/crypto/rand/"><code>crypto/rand</code></a> package instead. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/net/#ParseMAC"><code>ParseMAC</code></a> function now accepts 20-byte IP-over-InfiniBand (IPoIB) link-layer addresses. |
| </li> |
| |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/net/"><code>net</code></a> package, |
| there have been a few changes to DNS lookups. |
| First, the |
| <a href="/pkg/net/#DNSError"><code>DNSError</code></a> error implementation now implements |
| <a href="/pkg/net/#Error"><code>Error</code></a>, |
| and in particular its new |
| <a href="/pkg/net/#DNSError.IsTemporary"><code>IsTemporary</code></a> |
| method returns true for DNS server errors. |
| Second, DNS lookup functions such as |
| <a href="/pkg/net/#LookupAddr"><code>LookupAddr</code></a> |
| now return rooted domain names (with a trailing dot) |
| on Plan 9 and Windows, to match the behavior of Go on Unix systems. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package has |
| a number of minor additions beyond the HTTP/2 support already discussed. |
| First, the |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#FileServer"><code>FileServer</code></a> now sorts its generated directory listings by file name. |
| Second, the |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#ServeFile"><code>ServeFile</code></a> function now refuses to serve a result |
| if the request's URL path contains “..” (dot-dot) as a path element. |
| Programs should typically use <code>FileServer</code> and |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Dir"><code>Dir</code></a> |
| instead of calling <code>ServeFile</code> directly. |
| Programs that need to serve file content in response to requests for URLs containing dot-dot can |
| still call <a href="/pkg/net/http/#ServeContent"><code>ServeContent</code></a>. |
| Third, the |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Client"><code>Client</code></a> now allows user code to set the |
| <code>Expect:</code> <code>100-continue</code> header (see |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Transport"><code>Transport.ExpectContinueTimeout</code></a>). |
| Fourth, there are |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#pkg-constants">five new error codes</a>: |
| <code>StatusPreconditionRequired</code> (428), |
| <code>StatusTooManyRequests</code> (429), |
| <code>StatusRequestHeaderFieldsTooLarge</code> (431), and |
| <code>StatusNetworkAuthenticationRequired</code> (511) from RFC 6585, |
| as well as the recently-approved |
| <code>StatusUnavailableForLegalReasons</code> (451). |
| Fifth, the implementation and documentation of |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#CloseNotifier"><code>CloseNotifier</code></a> |
| has been substantially changed. |
| The <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Hijacker"><code>Hijacker</code></a> |
| interface now works correctly on connections that have previously |
| been used with <code>CloseNotifier</code>. |
| The documentation now describes when <code>CloseNotifier</code> |
| is expected to work. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/net/http/"><code>net/http</code></a> package, |
| there are a few changes related to the handling of a |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Request"><code>Request</code></a> data structure with its <code>Method</code> field set to the empty string. |
| An empty <code>Method</code> field has always been documented as an alias for <code>"GET"</code> |
| and it remains so. |
| However, Go 1.6 fixes a few routines that did not treat an empty |
| <code>Method</code> the same as an explicit <code>"GET"</code>. |
| Most notably, in previous releases |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Client"><code>Client</code></a> followed redirects only with |
| <code>Method</code> set explicitly to <code>"GET"</code>; |
| in Go 1.6 <code>Client</code> also follows redirects for the empty <code>Method</code>. |
| Finally, |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#NewRequest"><code>NewRequest</code></a> accepts a <code>method</code> argument that has not been |
| documented as allowed to be empty. |
| In past releases, passing an empty <code>method</code> argument resulted |
| in a <code>Request</code> with an empty <code>Method</code> field. |
| In Go 1.6, the resulting <code>Request</code> always has an initialized |
| <code>Method</code> field: if its argument is an empty string, <code>NewRequest</code> |
| sets the <code>Method</code> field in the returned <code>Request</code> to <code>"GET"</code>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/net/http/httptest/"><code>net/http/httptest</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/httptest/#ResponseRecorder"><code>ResponseRecorder</code></a> now initializes a default Content-Type header |
| using the same content-sniffing algorithm as in |
| <a href="/pkg/net/http/#Server"><code>http.Server</code></a>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/net/url/"><code>net/url</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/net/url/#Parse"><code>Parse</code></a> is now stricter and more spec-compliant regarding the parsing |
| of host names. |
| For example, spaces in the host name are no longer accepted. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| Also in the <a href="/pkg/net/url/"><code>net/url</code></a> package, |
| the <a href="/pkg/net/url/#Error"><code>Error</code></a> type now implements |
| <a href="/pkg/net/#Error"><code>net.Error</code></a>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/os/"><code>os</code></a> package's |
| <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> |
| now return correct results when inquiring about an |
| <a href="/pkg/os/#SyscallError"><code>SyscallError</code></a>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| On Unix-like systems, when a write |
| to <a href="/pkg/os/#pkg-variables"><code>os.Stdout</code> |
| or <code>os.Stderr</code></a> (more precisely, an <code>os.File</code> |
| opened for file descriptor 1 or 2) fails due to a broken pipe error, |
| the program will raise a <code>SIGPIPE</code> signal. |
| By default this will cause the program to exit; this may be changed by |
| calling the |
| <a href="/pkg/os/signal"><code>os/signal</code></a> |
| <a href="/pkg/os/signal/#Notify"><code>Notify</code></a> function |
| for <code>syscall.SIGPIPE</code>. |
| A write to a broken pipe on a file descriptor other 1 or 2 will simply |
| return <code>syscall.EPIPE</code> (possibly wrapped in |
| <a href="/pkg/os#PathError"><code>os.PathError</code></a> |
| and/or <a href="/pkg/os#SyscallError"><code>os.SyscallError</code></a>) |
| to the caller. |
| The old behavior of raising an uncatchable <code>SIGPIPE</code> signal |
| after 10 consecutive writes to a broken pipe no longer occurs. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| In the <a href="/pkg/os/exec/"><code>os/exec</code></a> package, |
| <a href="/pkg/os/exec/#Cmd"><code>Cmd</code></a>'s |
| <a href="/pkg/os/exec/#Cmd.Output"><code>Output</code></a> method continues to return an |
| <a href="/pkg/os/exec/#ExitError"><code>ExitError</code></a> when a command exits with an unsuccessful status. |
| If standard error would otherwise have been discarded, |
| the returned <code>ExitError</code> now holds a prefix and suffix |
| (currently 32 kB) of the failed command's standard error output, |
| for debugging or for inclusion in error messages. |
| The <code>ExitError</code>'s |
| <a href="/pkg/os/exec/#ExitError.String"><code>String</code></a> |
| method does not show the captured standard error; |
| programs must retrieve it from the data structure |
| separately. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| On Windows, the <a href="/pkg/path/filepath/"><code>path/filepath</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/path/filepath/#Join"><code>Join</code></a> function now correctly handles the case when the base is a relative drive path. |
| For example, <code>Join(`c:`,</code> <code>`a`)</code> now |
| returns <code>`c:a`</code> instead of <code>`c:\a`</code> as in past releases. |
| This may affect code that expects the incorrect result. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| In the <a href="/pkg/regexp/"><code>regexp</code></a> package, |
| the |
| <a href="/pkg/regexp/#Regexp"><code>Regexp</code></a> type has always been safe for use by |
| concurrent goroutines. |
| It uses a <a href="/pkg/sync/#Mutex"><code>sync.Mutex</code></a> to protect |
| a cache of scratch spaces used during regular expression searches. |
| Some high-concurrency servers using the same <code>Regexp</code> from many goroutines |
| have seen degraded performance due to contention on that mutex. |
| To help such servers, <code>Regexp</code> now has a |
| <a href="/pkg/regexp/#Regexp.Copy"><code>Copy</code></a> method, |
| which makes a copy of a <code>Regexp</code> that shares most of the structure |
| of the original but has its own scratch space cache. |
| Two goroutines can use different copies of a <code>Regexp</code> |
| without mutex contention. |
| A copy does have additional space overhead, so <code>Copy</code> |
| should only be used when contention has been observed. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/strconv/"><code>strconv</code></a> package adds |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#IsGraphic"><code>IsGraphic</code></a>, |
| similar to <a href="/pkg/strconv/#IsPrint"><code>IsPrint</code></a>. |
| It also adds |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteToGraphic"><code>QuoteToGraphic</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteRuneToGraphic"><code>QuoteRuneToGraphic</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#AppendQuoteToGraphic"><code>AppendQuoteToGraphic</code></a>, |
| and |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic"><code>AppendQuoteRuneToGraphic</code></a>, |
| analogous to |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteToASCII"><code>QuoteToASCII</code></a>, |
| <a href="/pkg/strconv/#QuoteRuneToASCII"><code>QuoteRuneToASCII</code></a>, |
| and so on. |
| The <code>ASCII</code> family escapes all space characters except ASCII space (U+0020). |
| In contrast, the <code>Graphic</code> family does not escape any Unicode space characters (category Zs). |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| In the <a href="/pkg/testing/"><code>testing</code></a> package, |
| when a test calls |
| <a href="/pkg/testing/#T.Parallel">t.Parallel</a>, |
| that test is paused until all non-parallel tests complete, and then |
| that test continues execution with all other parallel tests. |
| Go 1.6 changes the time reported for such a test: |
| previously the time counted only the parallel execution, |
| but now it also counts the time from the start of testing |
| until the call to <code>t.Parallel</code>. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/text/template/"><code>text/template</code></a> package |
| contains two minor changes, in addition to the <a href="#template">major changes</a> |
| described above. |
| First, it adds a new |
| <a href="/pkg/text/template/#ExecError"><code>ExecError</code></a> type |
| returned for any error during |
| <a href="/pkg/text/template/#Template.Execute"><code>Execute</code></a> |
| that does not originate in a <code>Write</code> to the underlying writer. |
| Callers can distinguish template usage errors from I/O errors by checking for |
| <code>ExecError</code>. |
| Second, the |
| <a href="/pkg/text/template/#Template.Funcs"><code>Funcs</code></a> method |
| now checks that the names used as keys in the |
| <a href="/pkg/text/template/#FuncMap"><code>FuncMap</code></a> |
| are identifiers that can appear in a template function invocation. |
| If not, <code>Funcs</code> panics. |
| </li> |
| |
| <li> |
| The <a href="/pkg/time/"><code>time</code></a> package's |
| <a href="/pkg/time/#Parse"><code>Parse</code></a> function has always rejected any day of month larger than 31, |
| such as January 32. |
| In Go 1.6, <code>Parse</code> now also rejects February 29 in non-leap years, |
| February 30, February 31, April 31, June 31, September 31, and November 31. |
| </li> |
| |
| </ul> |
| |