We changed to delaying all transforms of generic functions, since there
are so many complicated situations where type params can be used. We
missed changing so that all Call expressions(not just some) are delayed
if in a generic function. This changes to delaying all transforms on
calls in generic functions. Had to convert Call() to g.callExpr() (so we
can access g.delayTransform()). By always delaying transforms on calls
in generic functions, we actually simplify the code a bit both in
g.CallExpr() and stencil.go.
Fixes#51236
Change-Id: I0342c7995254082c4baf709b0b92a06ec14425e9
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The method of using references to dictionaries to hold methods
live during linker deadcode elimination wasn't working very well.
I implemented a new scheme in the CL below this, so this CL strips
out the old method.
The new method has the added benefit of having 0 runtime overhead
(unlike the stuff we're ripping out here, which does have a small overhead).
Update #48047
Change-Id: I68ac57119792d53c58f1480f407de6ab2bb53211
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For this unusual case, where a constraint specifies exactly one type, we
can have a COMPLIT expression with a type that is/has typeparams.
Therefore, we add code to delay transformCompLit for generic functions.
We also need to break out transformAddr (which corresponds to tcAddr),
and added code for delaying it as well. Also, we now need to export
generic functions containing untransformed OCOMPLIT and OKEY nodes, so
added support for that in iexport.go/iimport.go. Untransformed OKEY
nodes include an ir.Ident/ONONAME which we can now export.
Had to adjust some code/asserts in transformCompLit(), since we may now
be transforming an OCOMPLIT from an imported generic function (i.e. from
a non-local package).
Fixes#48537
Change-Id: I09e1b3bd08b4e013c0b098b8a25d082efa1fef51
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We currently make dictionaries contain a relocation pointing to
methods that generic code might use, so that those methods are not
deadcode eliminated. However, with inlining we can end up not using
the dictionary, making the reference from the dictionary to the method
no longer keep the method alive.
Fix this by keeping the dictionary alive at generic interface call sites.
It's a bit of overkill, as we only need to keep the dictionary statically
alive. We don't actually need it dynamically alive, which is what KeepAlive
does. But it works. It ends up generating a LEAQ + stack spill that aren't
necessary, but that's pretty low overhead.
To make this work, I needed to stop generating methods on shape types.
We should do this anyway, as we shouldn't ever need them. But currently
we do use them! issue44688.go has a test that only works because it calls
a method on a shape type. I've disabled that test for now, will work on it
in a subsequent CL.
Fixes#48047
Change-Id: I78968868d6486c1745f51b8b43be0898931432a2
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The delayTransform only checks whether ir.CurFunc is generic function or
not. but when compiling a non-generic closure inside a generic function,
we also want to delay the transformation, which delayTransform fails to
detect, since when ir.CurFunc is the closure, not the top level function.
Instead, we must rely on irgen.topFuncIsGeneric field to decide whether
to delay the transformation, the same logic with what is being done for
not adding closure inside a generic function to g.target.Decls list.
Fixes#48609
Change-Id: I5bf5592027d112fe8b19c92eb906add424c46507
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So next CL will make delayTransform to become irgen's method, because
the delay transform logic also depends on irgen.topFuncIsGeneric field.
For #48609
Change-Id: I660ed19856bd06c3b6f4279a9184db96175dea2d
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This change cleans up the code, by just delaying all transforms on
generic function methods/functions until stenciling time. That way, we
don't have extra code to decide whether to delay, or an extra value for
the typecheck flag. We are already doing all possible transforms at
stencil time anyway, so no changes to the stenciling code.
transform.go includes a change for one case where we check for shape
rather than tparam, now that we only apply transforms to stenciled
functions, not generic functions. This change is to allow CONVIFACE node
to be correctly inserted (needed for dictionaries), even with this
strange code that doesn't add the CONVIFACE node if the concrete type is
NOT huge...
Change-Id: I5f1e71fab11b53385902074915b3ad85f8e753fa
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Now that we are computing the dictionary format on the instantiated
functions, we can remove the early transformation code that was needed
to create the implicit CONVIFACE nodes in the generic function.
Change-Id: I1695484e7d59bccbfb757994f3e40e84288759a5
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Includes Robert's suggested fix in validate.go to not fail on
non-constant alignof/offsetof/sizeof calls. Further changes to wait on
transforming these calls until stenciling time, when we can call
EvalConst() to evaluate them once all the relevant types are known.
Added a bunch of new tests for non-constant Sizeof/Alignof/Offsetof.
Fixes#47716
Change-Id: I469af888eb9ce3a853124d919eda753971009b3e
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In the cases where we do an early call to typecheckaste() in noder to
expose CONVIFACE nodes, we need a preceding call to transformArgs().
This is needed to allow typecheckaste() to run correctly, in the case of
f(g()), where g has multiple return values.
I also cleaned up the code a bit and commented the code in Call(), and
we do the call to typecheckaste() in several more cases.
In stencil.go:stencil(), I moved the transformCall earlier for the
OCALLMETH/ODOTMETH case, just as I did in my previous CL for
OCALL/OFUNCINST. By doing this, transformArgs no longer needs to deal
with the extra dictionary args. Therefore, I was able to simply
transformArgs() to look like typecheckargs() again, and make use of
RewriteMultiValue directly.
Updates #47514
Change-Id: I49eb82ac05707e50c2e2fb03e39458a70491d406
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Changes to add CONVIFACE nodes where possible in noder2, even when the
args are typeparams. The transformation to insert a CONVIFACE node can
usually happen when there an obvious assignment/conversion to an
interface type from a non-interface type. So, we now do this
tranformation for:
- direct conversions to an interface type
- function arguments that are implicitly converted to an interface
based on the parameter types.
- EQ/NE comparison of an interface and a non-interface
With this change, we can remove some special case checks for CONVIFACE
nodes after transformation in node(), and instead just have the one
check in the CONVIFACE check.
Change-Id: I7cf2ef920aebf9e5553210aeaf19f344e128ca62
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types2 will have already proved the expression's type is compatible, so
just assign the one const to have the same type as the operand.
Fixes#47258.
Change-Id: If0844e6bf6d0a5e6b11453b87df71353863ccc5d
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The builtins.go test is derived from
cmd/compile/internal/types2/testdata/check/builtins.go2, after removing
the error cases. Added a few extra tests for len/cap/append.
Fixed one bug, which is that DELETE operations can't be transformed if
their argument is a typeparam. Also, the tranform of LEN/CAP calls does
not need to be delayed. Removed out-date references to the old
typechecker in the comments.
Change-Id: If7a21506a7ff63ff7c8e87ccd614ef4ff3a0d3c8
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The Func.ClosureCalled flag is an optimization used by escape analysis
to detect closures that were directly called, so we know we have
visibility of the result flows. It's not needed by any other phases of
the compiler, so we might as well calculate it within escape analysis
too.
This saves some trouble during IR construction and trying to maintain
the ClosureCalled flag through inlining and copying.
Passes toolstash -cmp.
Change-Id: Ic53cecb7ac439745c0dfba2cd202b9cc40f1e47c
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Unneeded after the previous CL changed inlining to leave OINLCALL
nodes in place.
Change-Id: I9af09a86a21caa51a1117b3de17d7312dd702600
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Go spec call them "method values", not "partial calls". Note that
we use "OMETHVALUE" (as opposed to "OMETHODVALUE") to be consistent
with "OMETHEXPR".
Change-Id: I1efd985d4b567a1b4b20aeb603eb82db579edbd5
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better than Kind() == types.TTYPEPARAM
Change-Id: I4f35a177cd0cda3be615a92b7b2af1b5a60a3bbc
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This CL adds ir.RawOrigExpr, which can be used to represent arbitrary
constant expressions without needing to build and carry around an
entire IR representation of the original expression. It also allows
distinguishing how the constant was originally written by the
user (e.g., "0xff" vs "255").
This CL then also updates irgen to make use of this functionality for
expressions that were constant folded by types2.
Change-Id: I41e04e228e715ae2735c357b75633a2d08ee7021
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/323210
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Confusingly, the set of all methods of an interface is currently set in
Fields field of types.Interface. This is true, even though there is
already an allMethods field (and AllMethods method) of types.Type.
Change so the set of all methods of an interface are stored in
Type.allMethods, and Interface.Fields is removed. Update the comments
for Methods and AllMethods.
Change-Id: Ibc32bafae86831cba62606b079a855690612c759
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The setting of n.Use for a call node in transformCall() (and previously
in Call()), was not corrrect, since it was trying to use the number of
results of the call, rather than whether the call result was actually
used. We are already setting n.Use to ir.CallUseStmt if the call node is
directly a statement, so we just need to initialize n.Use to
ir.CallExprStmt in Call(), which will get changed to ir.CallUseStmt at
the statement level if it's used as a statement.
Enable inlining of stenciled functions (just disabled for testing,
easier debugging). The above n.Use fix was required for the inlining
to work for two cases.
Change-Id: Ie4ef6cd53fd4b20a4f3be31e629280909a545b7d
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Fix various small bugs related to delaying transformations due to type
params. Most of these relate to the need to delay a transformation when
an argument of an expression or statement has a type parameter that has
a structural constraint. The structural constraint implies the operation
should work, but the transformation can't happen until the actual value
of the type parameter is known.
- delay transformations for send statements and return statements if
any args/values have type params.
- similarly, delay transformation of a call where the function arg has
type parameters. This is mainly important for the case where the
function arg is a pure type parameter, but has a structural
constraint that requires it to be a function. Move the setting of
n.Use to transformCall(), since we may not know how many return
values there are until then, if the function arg is a type parameter.
- set the type of unary expressions from the type2 type (as we do with
most other expressions), since that works better with expressions
with type params.
- deal with these delayed transformations in subster.node() and convert
the CALL checks to a switch statement.
- make sure ir.CurFunc is set properly during stenciling, including
closures (needed for transforming return statements during
stenciling).
New test file typelist.go with tests for these cases.
Change-Id: I1b82f949d8cec47d906429209e846f4ebc8ec85e
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We can now use transformAssign.
The only remaining typechecker calls in the noder2 pass are for
CompLitExpr nodes (OCOMPLIT).
Change-Id: I25671c79cc30749767bb16f84e9f151b943eccd1
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Pull out the tranformation part of the typechecking functions for:
- selector expressions (OXDOT)
- calls to builtin functions (which go through the typechecker loop
twice, once for the call and once for each different kind of
builtin).
Some of the transformation functions create new nodes that should have
the same type as the original node. For consistency, now each of the
transformation functions requires that the node passed in has its type
and typecheck flag set. If the transformation function replaces or adds
new nodes, it will set the type and typecheck flag for those new nodes.
As usual, passes all the gotests, even with -G=3 enabled.
Change-Id: Ic48b0ce5f58425f4a358afa78315bfc7c28066c4
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Pull out the transformation part of the typechecking functions for:
- assignment statements
- return statements
- send statements
- select statements
- type conversions
- normal function/method calls
- index operations
The transform functions are like the original typechecking functions,
but with all code removed related to:
- Detecting compile-time errors (already done by types2)
- Setting the actual type of existing nodes (already done based on
info from types2)
- Dealing with untyped constants
Moved all the transformation functions to a separate file, transform.go.
Continuing with the same pattern, we delay transforming a node if it has
any type params in its args, marking it with a typecheck flag of 3, and
do the actual transformation during stenciling.
Assignment statements are tricky, since their transformation must be
delayed if any of the left or right-hands-sides are delayed.
Still to do are:
- selector expressions (OXDOT)
- composite literal expressions (OCOMPLIT)
- builtin function calls
Change-Id: Ie608cadbbc69b40db0067a5536cf707dd974aacc
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For additions, compares, and slices, create transform functions that do
just the transformations for those nodes by the typecheck package (given
that the code has been fully typechecked by types2). For nodes that have
no args with typeparams, we call these transform functions directly in
noder2. But for nodes that have args with typeparams, we have to delay
and call the tranform functions during stenciling, since we don't know
the specific types involved.
We indicate that a node still needs transformation by setting Typecheck
to a new value 3. This value means the current type of the node has been
set (via types2), but the node may still need transformation.
Had to export typcheck.IsCmp and typecheck.Assignop from the typecheck
package.
Added new tests list2.go (required delaying compare typecheck/transform
because of != compare in checkList) and adder.go (requires delaying add
typecheck/transform, since it can do addition for numbers or strings).
There are several more transformation functions needed for expressions
(indexing, calls, etc.) and several more complicated ones needed for
statements (mainly various kinds of assignments).
Change-Id: I7d89d13a4108308ea0304a4b815ab60b40c59b0a
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For Builtin ops, we currently stay with using the old
typechecker to transform the call to a more specific expression
and possibly use more specific ops. However, for a bunch of the
ops, we delay calling the old typechecker if any of the args have
type params, for a variety of reasons.
In the near future, we will start creating separate functions that do
the same transformations as the old typechecker for calls, builtins,
indexing, comparisons, etc. These functions can then be called at noder
time for nodes with no type params, and at stenciling time for nodes
with type params.
Remove unnecessary calls to types1 typechecker for most kinds of
statements (still need it for SendStmt, AssignStmt, ReturnStmt, and
SelectStmt). In particular, we don't need it for RangeStmt, and this
avoids some complaints by the types1 typechecker on generic code.
Other small changes:
- Fix check on whether to delay calling types1-typechecker on type
conversions. Should check if HasTParam is true, rather than if the
type is directly a TYPEPARAM.
- Don't call types1-typechecker on an indexing operation if the left
operand has a typeparam in its type and is not obviously a TMAP,
TSLICE, or TARRAY. As above, we will eventually have to create a new
function that can do the required transformations (for complicated
cases) at noder time or stenciling time.
- Copy n.BuiltinOp in subster.node()
- The complex arithmetic example in absdiff.go now works.
- Added new tests double.go and append.go
- Added new example with a new() call in settable.go
Change-Id: I8f377afb6126cab1826bd3c2732aa8cdf1f7e0b4
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Add support for channels in subster.typ(). Add new test file chans.go.
To support assignability of bidirectional channel args to directional
channel params, I needed to type check generic calls after they are
instantiated. (Eventually, we will create separate functions to just do
the assignability logic, so we don't need to call the old typechecker in
this case.) So, for generic calls, we now leave the call as OCALL (as a
signal that the call still needs typechecking), and do typecheck.Call()
during stenciling.
Smaller changes:
- Set the type of an instantiated OCLOSURE node (and not just the associated
OFUNC node)
- In instTypeName2, filter out the space that types2.TypeString inserts
after a common in a typelist. Our standard naming requires no space
after the comma.
- With the assignability fix above, I no longer need the explicit
conversions in cons.go.
Change-Id: I148858bfc6708c0aa3f50bad7debce2b8c8c091f
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Simple change to avoid calling the old typechecker in noder.Addr(). This
fixes cases where generic code calls a pointer method with a non-pointer
receiver.
Added test typeparam/lockable.go that now works with this change.
For lockable.go to work, also fix incorrect check to decide whether to
translate an OXDOT now or later. We should delay translating an OXDOT
until instantiation (because we don't know how embedding, etc. will
work) if the receiver has any typeparam, not just if the receiver type
is a simple typeparam. We also have to handle OXDOT for now in
IsAddressable(), until we can remove calls to the old typechecker in
(*irgen).funcBody().
Change-Id: I77ee5efcef9a8f6c7133564106a32437e36ba4bb
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When doing a type conversion using a type param, delay the
transformation to OCONV/OCONVNOP until stenciling, since the nodes
created depend on the actual type.
Re-enable the fact.go test.
Change-Id: I3d5861aab3dd0e781d767f67435afaf951dfe451
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- Have to delay the extra transformation on methods invoked on a type
param, since the actual transformation (including path through
embedded fields) will depend on the instantiated type. I am currently
doing the transformation during the stencil substitution phase. We
probably should have a separate pass after noder2 and stenciling,
which drives the extra transformations that were in the old
typechecker.
- We handle method values (that are not called) and method calls. We
don't currently handle method expressions.
- Handle type substitution in function types, which is needed for
function args in generic functions.
- Added stringer.go and map.go tests, testing the above changes
(including constraints with embedded interfaces).
Change-Id: I3831a937d2b8814150f75bebf9f23ab10b93fa00
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/290550
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Create an extra OFUNCINST node as needed, if there are inferred type
arguments for a generic function call.
Change-Id: Id990c5bcbce2893377072a7e41c7c6785d1eab60
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/288952
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Expresses things more clearly, especially in cases like 'f := min[int]'
where we create a xsgeneric function instantiation, but don't immediately
call it.
min[int](2, 3) now looks like:
. CALLFUNC tc(1) Use:1 int # min1.go:11 int
. . FUNCINST tc(1) FUNC-func(int, int) int # min1.go:11 FUNC-func(int, int) int
. . . NAME-main.min tc(1) Class:PFUNC Offset:0 Used FUNC-func[T](T, T) T # min1.go:3
. . FUNCINST-Targs
. . . TYPE .int Offset:0 type int
. CALLFUNC-Args
. . LITERAL-2 tc(1) int # min1.go:11
. . LITERAL-3 tc(1) int # min1.go:11
Remove the targs parameter from ir.NewCallExpr(), not needed anymore,
since type arguments are included in the FUNCINST.
Change-Id: I23438b75288330475294d7ace239ba64acfa641e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/288951
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Will now run "go tool compile -G=2 -W=2" on a simple generic function
with multiple type parameters and a call to that function with multiple
explicit type arguments.
We will likely move to have a separate function/type instantiation node,
in order distinguish these cases from normal index expressions.
Change-Id: I0a571902d63785cc06240ed4ba0495923403b511
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/288433
Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com>
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Will now run "go tool compile -G=2 -W=2" on a simple generic function
with one type parameter and a call to that function with one explicit
type argument. Next change will handle multiple type arguments.
Change-Id: Ia7d17ea2a02bf99bd50e673ac80ae4aad4c48440
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/288432
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We are focusing on generic functions first, and ignoring type lists for
now.
The signatures of types.NewSignature() and ir.NewCallExpr() changed (with
addition of type args/params).
Change-Id: I57480be3d1f65690b2946e15dd74929bf42873f2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/287416
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The recent refactoring of SelectorExpr code to helpers broke the
handling of MethodExprs when there is an embedded field involved (e.g.
test/method7.go, line 48). If there is an embedded field involved, the
node op seen in DotMethod() is an ODOT rather than an OTYPE. Also, the
receiver type of the result should be the original type, but the new
code was using the last type after following the embedding path.
Change-Id: I13f7ea6448b03d3e8f974103ee3a027219ca8388
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/286176
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This CL refactors the SelectorExpr-handling code added in CL 285373
into helper functions that can eventually be reused by iimport.
Change-Id: I15b4a96c242f63cb370d7492ed08168550724f47
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/285953
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By using the types2 Selection information, we can create ODOT, ODOTPTR,
OCALLPART, ODOTMETH, ODOTINTER, and OMETHEXPR nodes directly in noder,
so we don't have to do that functionality in typecheck.go. Intermediate
nodes are created as needed for embedded fields. Don't have to typecheck
the results of g.selectorExpr(), because we set the types of all the
needed nodes.
There is one bug remaining in 'go test reflect' that will be fixed when dev.regabi is merged.
Change-Id: I4599d43197783e318610deb2f208137f9344ab63
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/285373
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This CL updates irgen to directly set the type for a bunch of basic
expressions that are easy to handle already. Trickier rewrites are
still handled with typecheck.Expr, but responsibility of calling that
is pushed down to the conversion of individual operations.
Change-Id: I774ac6ab4c72ad854860ab5c741867dd42a066b3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/285058
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This CL adds "irgen", a new noding implementation that utilizes types2
to guide IR construction. Notably, it completely skips dealing with
constant and type expressions (aside from using ir.TypeNode to
interoperate with the types1 typechecker), because types2 already
handled those. It also omits any syntax checking, trusting that types2
already rejected any errors.
It currently still utilizes the types1 typechecker for the desugaring
operations it handles (e.g., turning OAS2 into OAS2FUNC/etc, inserting
implicit conversions, rewriting f(g()) functions, and so on). However,
the IR is constructed in a fully incremental fashion, so it should be
easy to now piecemeal replace those dependencies as needed.
Nearly all of "go test std cmd" passes with -G=3 enabled by
default. The main remaining blocker is the number of test/run.go
failures. There also appear to be cases where types2 does not provide
us with position information. These will be iterated upon.
Portions and ideas from Dan Scales's CL 276653.
Change-Id: Ic99e8f2d0267b0312d30c10d5d043f5817a59c9d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/281932
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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