go/test/escape_closure.go
Matthew Dempsky e99e9a6e01 [dev.typeparams] cmd/compile: simplify ~r/~b naming
The compiler renames anonymous and blank result parameters to ~rN or
~bN, but the current semantics for computing N are rather annoying and
difficult to reproduce cleanly. They also lead to difficult to read
escape analysis results in tests.

This CL changes N to always be calculated as the parameter's index
within the function's result parameter tuple. E.g., if a function has
a single result, it will now always be named "~r0".

The normative change to this CL is fairly simple, but it requires
updating a lot of test expectations.

Change-Id: I58a3c94de00cb822cb94efe52d115531193c993c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/323010
Trust: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
2021-05-26 23:50:32 +00:00

179 lines
4.2 KiB
Go

// errorcheck -0 -m -l
// Copyright 2015 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Test escape analysis for closure arguments.
package escape
var sink interface{}
func ClosureCallArgs0() {
x := 0
func(p *int) { // ERROR "p does not escape" "func literal does not escape"
*p = 1
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs1() {
x := 0
for {
func(p *int) { // ERROR "p does not escape" "func literal does not escape"
*p = 1
}(&x)
}
}
func ClosureCallArgs2() {
for {
x := 0
func(p *int) { // ERROR "p does not escape" "func literal does not escape"
*p = 1
}(&x)
}
}
func ClosureCallArgs3() {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
func(p *int) { // ERROR "leaking param: p" "func literal does not escape"
sink = p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs4() {
x := 0
_ = func(p *int) *int { // ERROR "leaking param: p to result ~r0" "func literal does not escape"
return p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs5() {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
// TODO(mdempsky): We get "leaking param: p" here because the new escape analysis pass
// can tell that p flows directly to sink, but it's a little weird. Re-evaluate.
sink = func(p *int) *int { // ERROR "leaking param: p" "func literal does not escape"
return p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs6() {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
func(p *int) { // ERROR "moved to heap: p" "func literal does not escape"
sink = &p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs7() {
var pp *int
for {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
func(p *int) { // ERROR "leaking param: p" "func literal does not escape"
pp = p
}(&x)
}
_ = pp
}
func ClosureCallArgs8() {
x := 0
defer func(p *int) { // ERROR "p does not escape" "func literal does not escape"
*p = 1
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs9() {
// BAD: x should not leak
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
for {
defer func(p *int) { // ERROR "func literal escapes to heap" "p does not escape"
*p = 1
}(&x)
}
}
func ClosureCallArgs10() {
for {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
defer func(p *int) { // ERROR "func literal escapes to heap" "p does not escape"
*p = 1
}(&x)
}
}
func ClosureCallArgs11() {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
defer func(p *int) { // ERROR "leaking param: p" "func literal does not escape"
sink = p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs12() {
x := 0
defer func(p *int) *int { // ERROR "leaking param: p to result ~r0" "func literal does not escape"
return p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs13() {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
defer func(p *int) { // ERROR "moved to heap: p" "func literal does not escape"
sink = &p
}(&x)
}
func ClosureCallArgs14() {
x := 0
p := &x
_ = func(p **int) *int { // ERROR "leaking param: p to result ~r0 level=1" "func literal does not escape"
return *p
}(&p)
}
func ClosureCallArgs15() {
x := 0 // ERROR "moved to heap: x"
p := &x
sink = func(p **int) *int { // ERROR "leaking param content: p" "func literal does not escape"
return *p
}(&p)
}
func ClosureLeak1(s string) string { // ERROR "s does not escape"
t := s + "YYYY" // ERROR "escapes to heap"
return ClosureLeak1a(t) // ERROR "... argument does not escape"
}
// See #14409 -- returning part of captured var leaks it.
func ClosureLeak1a(a ...string) string { // ERROR "leaking param: a to result ~r0 level=1$"
return func() string { // ERROR "func literal does not escape"
return a[0]
}()
}
func ClosureLeak2(s string) string { // ERROR "s does not escape"
t := s + "YYYY" // ERROR "escapes to heap"
c := ClosureLeak2a(t) // ERROR "... argument does not escape"
return c
}
func ClosureLeak2a(a ...string) string { // ERROR "leaking param content: a"
return ClosureLeak2b(func() string { // ERROR "func literal does not escape"
return a[0]
})
}
func ClosureLeak2b(f func() string) string { // ERROR "f does not escape"
return f()
}
func ClosureIndirect() {
f := func(p *int) {} // ERROR "p does not escape" "func literal does not escape"
f(new(int)) // ERROR "new\(int\) does not escape"
g := f
g(new(int)) // ERROR "new\(int\) does not escape"
h := nopFunc
h(new(int)) // ERROR "new\(int\) does not escape"
}
func nopFunc(p *int) {} // ERROR "p does not escape"