go/ssa/util.go
Alan Donovan be28dbb86f go.types/ssa: split the load/parse/typecheck logic off into a separate package.
PLEASE NOTE: the APIs for both "importer" and "ssa" packages
will continue to evolve and both need some polishing; the key
thing is that this CL splits them.

The go.types/importer package contains contains the Importer,
which takes care of the mechanics of loading a set of packages
and type-checking them.  It exposes for each package a
PackageInfo containing:
- the package's ASTs (i.e. the input to the typechecker)
- the types.Package object
- the memoization of the typechecker callbacks for identifier
  resolution, constant folding and expression type inference.

Method-set computation (and hence bridge-method creation) is
now moved to after creation of all packages: since they are no
longer created in topological order, we can't guarantee the
needed delegate methods exist yet.

ssa.Package no longer has public TypeOf, ObjectOf, ValueOf methods.
The private counterparts are valid only during the build phase.

Also:
- added to go/types an informative error (not crash) for an
  importer() returning nil without error.
- removed Package.Name(), barely needed.
- changed Package.String() slightly.
- flag what looks like a bug in makeBridgeMethod. Will follow up.

R=golang-dev, gri
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/9898043
2013-05-31 16:14:13 -04:00

201 lines
5.1 KiB
Go

package ssa
// This file defines a number of miscellaneous utility functions.
import (
"fmt"
"go/ast"
"io"
"os"
"reflect"
"code.google.com/p/go.tools/go/types"
)
func unreachable() {
panic("unreachable")
}
//// AST utilities
// unparen returns e with any enclosing parentheses stripped.
func unparen(e ast.Expr) ast.Expr {
for {
p, ok := e.(*ast.ParenExpr)
if !ok {
break
}
e = p.X
}
return e
}
// isBlankIdent returns true iff e is an Ident with name "_".
// They have no associated types.Object, and thus no type.
//
// TODO(gri): consider making typechecker not treat them differently.
// It's one less thing for clients like us to worry about.
//
func isBlankIdent(e ast.Expr) bool {
id, ok := e.(*ast.Ident)
return ok && id.Name == "_"
}
//// Type utilities. Some of these belong in go/types.
// isPointer returns true for types whose underlying type is a pointer.
func isPointer(typ types.Type) bool {
if nt, ok := typ.(*types.Named); ok {
typ = nt.Underlying()
}
_, ok := typ.(*types.Pointer)
return ok
}
// pointer(typ) returns the type that is a pointer to typ.
// TODO(adonovan): inline and eliminate.
func pointer(typ types.Type) *types.Pointer {
return types.NewPointer(typ)
}
// methodIndex returns the method (and its index) named id within the
// method table of named or interface type typ. If not found,
// panic ensues.
//
func methodIndex(typ types.Type, id Id) (int, *types.Func) {
t := typ.(interface {
NumMethods() int
Method(i int) *types.Func
})
for i, n := 0, t.NumMethods(); i < n; i++ {
m := t.Method(i)
if MakeId(m.Name(), m.Pkg()) == id {
return i, m
}
}
panic(fmt.Sprint("method not found: ", id, " in interface ", typ))
}
// isSuperinterface returns true if x is a superinterface of y,
// i.e. x's methods are a subset of y's.
//
func isSuperinterface(x, y *types.Interface) bool {
if y.NumMethods() < x.NumMethods() {
return false
}
// TODO(adonovan): opt: this is quadratic.
outer:
for i, n := 0, x.NumMethods(); i < n; i++ {
xm := x.Method(i)
for j, m := 0, y.NumMethods(); j < m; j++ {
ym := y.Method(j)
if MakeId(xm.Name(), xm.Pkg()) == MakeId(ym.Name(), ym.Pkg()) {
if !types.IsIdentical(xm.Type(), ym.Type()) {
return false // common name but conflicting types
}
continue outer
}
}
return false // y doesn't have this method
}
return true
}
// canHaveConcreteMethods returns true iff typ may have concrete
// methods associated with it. Callers must supply allowPtr=true.
//
// TODO(gri): consider putting this in go/types. It's surprisingly subtle.
func canHaveConcreteMethods(typ types.Type, allowPtr bool) bool {
switch typ := typ.(type) {
case *types.Pointer:
return allowPtr && canHaveConcreteMethods(typ.Elem(), false)
case *types.Named:
switch typ.Underlying().(type) {
case *types.Pointer, *types.Interface:
return false
}
return true
case *types.Struct:
return true
}
return false
}
// DefaultType returns the default "typed" type for an "untyped" type;
// it returns the incoming type for all other types. If there is no
// corresponding untyped type, the result is types.Typ[types.Invalid].
//
// Exported to exp/ssa/interp.
//
// TODO(gri): this is a copy of go/types.defaultType; export that function.
//
func DefaultType(typ types.Type) types.Type {
if t, ok := typ.(*types.Basic); ok {
k := types.Invalid
switch t.Kind() {
// case UntypedNil:
// There is no default type for nil. For a good error message,
// catch this case before calling this function.
case types.UntypedBool:
k = types.Bool
case types.UntypedInt:
k = types.Int
case types.UntypedRune:
k = types.Rune
case types.UntypedFloat:
k = types.Float64
case types.UntypedComplex:
k = types.Complex128
case types.UntypedString:
k = types.String
}
typ = types.Typ[k]
}
return typ
}
// makeId returns the Id (name, pkg) if the name is exported or
// (name, nil) otherwise.
//
// Exported to exp/ssa/interp.
//
func MakeId(name string, pkg *types.Package) (id Id) {
id.Name = name
if !ast.IsExported(name) {
id.Pkg = pkg
// TODO(gri): fix
// if pkg.Path() == "" {
// panic("Package " + pkg.Name() + "has empty Path")
// }
}
return
}
type ids []Id // a sortable slice of Id
func (p ids) Len() int { return len(p) }
func (p ids) Less(i, j int) bool {
x, y := p[i], p[j]
// *Package pointers are canonical so order by them.
// Don't use x.Pkg.ImportPath because sometimes it's empty.
// (TODO(gri): fix that.)
return reflect.ValueOf(x.Pkg).Pointer() < reflect.ValueOf(y.Pkg).Pointer() ||
x.Pkg == y.Pkg && x.Name < y.Name
}
func (p ids) Swap(i, j int) { p[i], p[j] = p[j], p[i] }
// logStack prints the formatted "start" message to stderr and
// returns a closure that prints the corresponding "end" message.
// Call using 'defer logStack(...)()' to show builder stack on panic.
// Don't forget trailing parens!
//
func logStack(format string, args ...interface{}) func() {
msg := fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)
io.WriteString(os.Stderr, msg)
io.WriteString(os.Stderr, "\n")
return func() {
io.WriteString(os.Stderr, msg)
io.WriteString(os.Stderr, " end\n")
}
}