github.com/goproxy0/go@v0.0.0-20171111080102-49cc0c489d2c/src/cmd/go/alldocs.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5 // DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE. GENERATED BY mkalldocs.sh. 6 // Edit the documentation in other files and rerun mkalldocs.sh to generate this one. 7 8 // Go is a tool for managing Go source code. 9 // 10 // Usage: 11 // 12 // go command [arguments] 13 // 14 // The commands are: 15 // 16 // build compile packages and dependencies 17 // clean remove object files 18 // doc show documentation for package or symbol 19 // env print Go environment information 20 // bug start a bug report 21 // fix update packages to use new APIs 22 // fmt gofmt (reformat) package sources 23 // generate generate Go files by processing source 24 // get download and install packages and dependencies 25 // install compile and install packages and dependencies 26 // list list packages 27 // run compile and run Go program 28 // test test packages 29 // tool run specified go tool 30 // version print Go version 31 // vet report likely mistakes in packages 32 // 33 // Use "go help [command]" for more information about a command. 34 // 35 // Additional help topics: 36 // 37 // c calling between Go and C 38 // buildmode description of build modes 39 // filetype file types 40 // gopath GOPATH environment variable 41 // environment environment variables 42 // importpath import path syntax 43 // packages description of package lists 44 // testflag description of testing flags 45 // testfunc description of testing functions 46 // 47 // Use "go help [topic]" for more information about that topic. 48 // 49 // 50 // Compile packages and dependencies 51 // 52 // Usage: 53 // 54 // go build [-o output] [-i] [build flags] [packages] 55 // 56 // Build compiles the packages named by the import paths, 57 // along with their dependencies, but it does not install the results. 58 // 59 // If the arguments to build are a list of .go files, build treats 60 // them as a list of source files specifying a single package. 61 // 62 // When compiling a single main package, build writes 63 // the resulting executable to an output file named after 64 // the first source file ('go build ed.go rx.go' writes 'ed' or 'ed.exe') 65 // or the source code directory ('go build unix/sam' writes 'sam' or 'sam.exe'). 66 // The '.exe' suffix is added when writing a Windows executable. 67 // 68 // When compiling multiple packages or a single non-main package, 69 // build compiles the packages but discards the resulting object, 70 // serving only as a check that the packages can be built. 71 // 72 // When compiling packages, build ignores files that end in '_test.go'. 73 // 74 // The -o flag, only allowed when compiling a single package, 75 // forces build to write the resulting executable or object 76 // to the named output file, instead of the default behavior described 77 // in the last two paragraphs. 78 // 79 // The -i flag installs the packages that are dependencies of the target. 80 // 81 // The build flags are shared by the build, clean, get, install, list, run, 82 // and test commands: 83 // 84 // -a 85 // force rebuilding of packages that are already up-to-date. 86 // -n 87 // print the commands but do not run them. 88 // -p n 89 // the number of programs, such as build commands or 90 // test binaries, that can be run in parallel. 91 // The default is the number of CPUs available. 92 // -race 93 // enable data race detection. 94 // Supported only on linux/amd64, freebsd/amd64, darwin/amd64 and windows/amd64. 95 // -msan 96 // enable interoperation with memory sanitizer. 97 // Supported only on linux/amd64, 98 // and only with Clang/LLVM as the host C compiler. 99 // -v 100 // print the names of packages as they are compiled. 101 // -work 102 // print the name of the temporary work directory and 103 // do not delete it when exiting. 104 // -x 105 // print the commands. 106 // 107 // -asmflags '[pattern=]arg list' 108 // arguments to pass on each go tool asm invocation. 109 // -buildmode mode 110 // build mode to use. See 'go help buildmode' for more. 111 // -compiler name 112 // name of compiler to use, as in runtime.Compiler (gccgo or gc). 113 // -gccgoflags '[pattern=]arg list' 114 // arguments to pass on each gccgo compiler/linker invocation. 115 // -gcflags '[pattern=]arg list' 116 // arguments to pass on each go tool compile invocation. 117 // -installsuffix suffix 118 // a suffix to use in the name of the package installation directory, 119 // in order to keep output separate from default builds. 120 // If using the -race flag, the install suffix is automatically set to race 121 // or, if set explicitly, has _race appended to it. Likewise for the -msan 122 // flag. Using a -buildmode option that requires non-default compile flags 123 // has a similar effect. 124 // -ldflags '[pattern=]arg list' 125 // arguments to pass on each go tool link invocation. 126 // -linkshared 127 // link against shared libraries previously created with 128 // -buildmode=shared. 129 // -pkgdir dir 130 // install and load all packages from dir instead of the usual locations. 131 // For example, when building with a non-standard configuration, 132 // use -pkgdir to keep generated packages in a separate location. 133 // -tags 'tag list' 134 // a space-separated list of build tags to consider satisfied during the 135 // build. For more information about build tags, see the description of 136 // build constraints in the documentation for the go/build package. 137 // -toolexec 'cmd args' 138 // a program to use to invoke toolchain programs like vet and asm. 139 // For example, instead of running asm, the go command will run 140 // 'cmd args /path/to/asm <arguments for asm>'. 141 // 142 // The -asmflags, -gccgoflags, -gcflags, and -ldflags flags accept a 143 // space-separated list of arguments to pass to an underlying tool 144 // during the build. To embed spaces in an element in the list, surround 145 // it with either single or double quotes. The argument list may be 146 // preceded by a package pattern and an equal sign, which restricts 147 // the use of that argument list to the building of packages matching 148 // that pattern (see 'go help packages' for a description of package 149 // patterns). Without a pattern, the argument list applies only to the 150 // packages named on the command line. The flags may be repeated 151 // with different patterns in order to specify different arguments for 152 // different sets of packages. If a package matches patterns given in 153 // multiple flags, the latest match on the command line wins. 154 // For example, 'go build -gcflags=-S fmt' prints the disassembly 155 // only for package fmt, while 'go build -gcflags=all=-S fmt' 156 // prints the disassembly for fmt and all its dependencies. 157 // 158 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 159 // For more about where packages and binaries are installed, 160 // run 'go help gopath'. 161 // For more about calling between Go and C/C++, run 'go help c'. 162 // 163 // Note: Build adheres to certain conventions such as those described 164 // by 'go help gopath'. Not all projects can follow these conventions, 165 // however. Installations that have their own conventions or that use 166 // a separate software build system may choose to use lower-level 167 // invocations such as 'go tool compile' and 'go tool link' to avoid 168 // some of the overheads and design decisions of the build tool. 169 // 170 // See also: go install, go get, go clean. 171 // 172 // 173 // Remove object files 174 // 175 // Usage: 176 // 177 // go clean [-i] [-r] [-n] [-x] [-cache] [build flags] [packages] 178 // 179 // Clean removes object files from package source directories. 180 // The go command builds most objects in a temporary directory, 181 // so go clean is mainly concerned with object files left by other 182 // tools or by manual invocations of go build. 183 // 184 // Specifically, clean removes the following files from each of the 185 // source directories corresponding to the import paths: 186 // 187 // _obj/ old object directory, left from Makefiles 188 // _test/ old test directory, left from Makefiles 189 // _testmain.go old gotest file, left from Makefiles 190 // test.out old test log, left from Makefiles 191 // build.out old test log, left from Makefiles 192 // *.[568ao] object files, left from Makefiles 193 // 194 // DIR(.exe) from go build 195 // DIR.test(.exe) from go test -c 196 // MAINFILE(.exe) from go build MAINFILE.go 197 // *.so from SWIG 198 // 199 // In the list, DIR represents the final path element of the 200 // directory, and MAINFILE is the base name of any Go source 201 // file in the directory that is not included when building 202 // the package. 203 // 204 // The -i flag causes clean to remove the corresponding installed 205 // archive or binary (what 'go install' would create). 206 // 207 // The -n flag causes clean to print the remove commands it would execute, 208 // but not run them. 209 // 210 // The -r flag causes clean to be applied recursively to all the 211 // dependencies of the packages named by the import paths. 212 // 213 // The -x flag causes clean to print remove commands as it executes them. 214 // 215 // The -cache flag causes clean to remove the entire go build cache, 216 // in addition to cleaning specified packages (if any). 217 // 218 // For more about build flags, see 'go help build'. 219 // 220 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 221 // 222 // 223 // Show documentation for package or symbol 224 // 225 // Usage: 226 // 227 // go doc [-u] [-c] [package|[package.]symbol[.methodOrField]] 228 // 229 // Doc prints the documentation comments associated with the item identified by its 230 // arguments (a package, const, func, type, var, method, or struct field) 231 // followed by a one-line summary of each of the first-level items "under" 232 // that item (package-level declarations for a package, methods for a type, 233 // etc.). 234 // 235 // Doc accepts zero, one, or two arguments. 236 // 237 // Given no arguments, that is, when run as 238 // 239 // go doc 240 // 241 // it prints the package documentation for the package in the current directory. 242 // If the package is a command (package main), the exported symbols of the package 243 // are elided from the presentation unless the -cmd flag is provided. 244 // 245 // When run with one argument, the argument is treated as a Go-syntax-like 246 // representation of the item to be documented. What the argument selects depends 247 // on what is installed in GOROOT and GOPATH, as well as the form of the argument, 248 // which is schematically one of these: 249 // 250 // go doc <pkg> 251 // go doc <sym>[.<methodOrField>] 252 // go doc [<pkg>.]<sym>[.<methodOrField>] 253 // go doc [<pkg>.][<sym>.]<methodOrField> 254 // 255 // The first item in this list matched by the argument is the one whose documentation 256 // is printed. (See the examples below.) However, if the argument starts with a capital 257 // letter it is assumed to identify a symbol or method in the current directory. 258 // 259 // For packages, the order of scanning is determined lexically in breadth-first order. 260 // That is, the package presented is the one that matches the search and is nearest 261 // the root and lexically first at its level of the hierarchy. The GOROOT tree is 262 // always scanned in its entirety before GOPATH. 263 // 264 // If there is no package specified or matched, the package in the current 265 // directory is selected, so "go doc Foo" shows the documentation for symbol Foo in 266 // the current package. 267 // 268 // The package path must be either a qualified path or a proper suffix of a 269 // path. The go tool's usual package mechanism does not apply: package path 270 // elements like . and ... are not implemented by go doc. 271 // 272 // When run with two arguments, the first must be a full package path (not just a 273 // suffix), and the second is a symbol, or symbol with method or struct field. 274 // This is similar to the syntax accepted by godoc: 275 // 276 // go doc <pkg> <sym>[.<methodOrField>] 277 // 278 // In all forms, when matching symbols, lower-case letters in the argument match 279 // either case but upper-case letters match exactly. This means that there may be 280 // multiple matches of a lower-case argument in a package if different symbols have 281 // different cases. If this occurs, documentation for all matches is printed. 282 // 283 // Examples: 284 // go doc 285 // Show documentation for current package. 286 // go doc Foo 287 // Show documentation for Foo in the current package. 288 // (Foo starts with a capital letter so it cannot match 289 // a package path.) 290 // go doc encoding/json 291 // Show documentation for the encoding/json package. 292 // go doc json 293 // Shorthand for encoding/json. 294 // go doc json.Number (or go doc json.number) 295 // Show documentation and method summary for json.Number. 296 // go doc json.Number.Int64 (or go doc json.number.int64) 297 // Show documentation for json.Number's Int64 method. 298 // go doc cmd/doc 299 // Show package docs for the doc command. 300 // go doc -cmd cmd/doc 301 // Show package docs and exported symbols within the doc command. 302 // go doc template.new 303 // Show documentation for html/template's New function. 304 // (html/template is lexically before text/template) 305 // go doc text/template.new # One argument 306 // Show documentation for text/template's New function. 307 // go doc text/template new # Two arguments 308 // Show documentation for text/template's New function. 309 // 310 // At least in the current tree, these invocations all print the 311 // documentation for json.Decoder's Decode method: 312 // 313 // go doc json.Decoder.Decode 314 // go doc json.decoder.decode 315 // go doc json.decode 316 // cd go/src/encoding/json; go doc decode 317 // 318 // Flags: 319 // -c 320 // Respect case when matching symbols. 321 // -cmd 322 // Treat a command (package main) like a regular package. 323 // Otherwise package main's exported symbols are hidden 324 // when showing the package's top-level documentation. 325 // -u 326 // Show documentation for unexported as well as exported 327 // symbols, methods, and fields. 328 // 329 // 330 // Print Go environment information 331 // 332 // Usage: 333 // 334 // go env [-json] [var ...] 335 // 336 // Env prints Go environment information. 337 // 338 // By default env prints information as a shell script 339 // (on Windows, a batch file). If one or more variable 340 // names is given as arguments, env prints the value of 341 // each named variable on its own line. 342 // 343 // The -json flag prints the environment in JSON format 344 // instead of as a shell script. 345 // 346 // For more about environment variables, see 'go help environment'. 347 // 348 // 349 // Start a bug report 350 // 351 // Usage: 352 // 353 // go bug 354 // 355 // Bug opens the default browser and starts a new bug report. 356 // The report includes useful system information. 357 // 358 // 359 // Update packages to use new APIs 360 // 361 // Usage: 362 // 363 // go fix [packages] 364 // 365 // Fix runs the Go fix command on the packages named by the import paths. 366 // 367 // For more about fix, see 'go doc cmd/fix'. 368 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 369 // 370 // To run fix with specific options, run 'go tool fix'. 371 // 372 // See also: go fmt, go vet. 373 // 374 // 375 // Gofmt (reformat) package sources 376 // 377 // Usage: 378 // 379 // go fmt [-n] [-x] [packages] 380 // 381 // Fmt runs the command 'gofmt -l -w' on the packages named 382 // by the import paths. It prints the names of the files that are modified. 383 // 384 // For more about gofmt, see 'go doc cmd/gofmt'. 385 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 386 // 387 // The -n flag prints commands that would be executed. 388 // The -x flag prints commands as they are executed. 389 // 390 // To run gofmt with specific options, run gofmt itself. 391 // 392 // See also: go fix, go vet. 393 // 394 // 395 // Generate Go files by processing source 396 // 397 // Usage: 398 // 399 // go generate [-run regexp] [-n] [-v] [-x] [build flags] [file.go... | packages] 400 // 401 // Generate runs commands described by directives within existing 402 // files. Those commands can run any process but the intent is to 403 // create or update Go source files. 404 // 405 // Go generate is never run automatically by go build, go get, go test, 406 // and so on. It must be run explicitly. 407 // 408 // Go generate scans the file for directives, which are lines of 409 // the form, 410 // 411 // //go:generate command argument... 412 // 413 // (note: no leading spaces and no space in "//go") where command 414 // is the generator to be run, corresponding to an executable file 415 // that can be run locally. It must either be in the shell path 416 // (gofmt), a fully qualified path (/usr/you/bin/mytool), or a 417 // command alias, described below. 418 // 419 // Note that go generate does not parse the file, so lines that look 420 // like directives in comments or multiline strings will be treated 421 // as directives. 422 // 423 // The arguments to the directive are space-separated tokens or 424 // double-quoted strings passed to the generator as individual 425 // arguments when it is run. 426 // 427 // Quoted strings use Go syntax and are evaluated before execution; a 428 // quoted string appears as a single argument to the generator. 429 // 430 // Go generate sets several variables when it runs the generator: 431 // 432 // $GOARCH 433 // The execution architecture (arm, amd64, etc.) 434 // $GOOS 435 // The execution operating system (linux, windows, etc.) 436 // $GOFILE 437 // The base name of the file. 438 // $GOLINE 439 // The line number of the directive in the source file. 440 // $GOPACKAGE 441 // The name of the package of the file containing the directive. 442 // $DOLLAR 443 // A dollar sign. 444 // 445 // Other than variable substitution and quoted-string evaluation, no 446 // special processing such as "globbing" is performed on the command 447 // line. 448 // 449 // As a last step before running the command, any invocations of any 450 // environment variables with alphanumeric names, such as $GOFILE or 451 // $HOME, are expanded throughout the command line. The syntax for 452 // variable expansion is $NAME on all operating systems. Due to the 453 // order of evaluation, variables are expanded even inside quoted 454 // strings. If the variable NAME is not set, $NAME expands to the 455 // empty string. 456 // 457 // A directive of the form, 458 // 459 // //go:generate -command xxx args... 460 // 461 // specifies, for the remainder of this source file only, that the 462 // string xxx represents the command identified by the arguments. This 463 // can be used to create aliases or to handle multiword generators. 464 // For example, 465 // 466 // //go:generate -command foo go tool foo 467 // 468 // specifies that the command "foo" represents the generator 469 // "go tool foo". 470 // 471 // Generate processes packages in the order given on the command line, 472 // one at a time. If the command line lists .go files, they are treated 473 // as a single package. Within a package, generate processes the 474 // source files in a package in file name order, one at a time. Within 475 // a source file, generate runs generators in the order they appear 476 // in the file, one at a time. 477 // 478 // If any generator returns an error exit status, "go generate" skips 479 // all further processing for that package. 480 // 481 // The generator is run in the package's source directory. 482 // 483 // Go generate accepts one specific flag: 484 // 485 // -run="" 486 // if non-empty, specifies a regular expression to select 487 // directives whose full original source text (excluding 488 // any trailing spaces and final newline) matches the 489 // expression. 490 // 491 // It also accepts the standard build flags including -v, -n, and -x. 492 // The -v flag prints the names of packages and files as they are 493 // processed. 494 // The -n flag prints commands that would be executed. 495 // The -x flag prints commands as they are executed. 496 // 497 // For more about build flags, see 'go help build'. 498 // 499 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 500 // 501 // 502 // Download and install packages and dependencies 503 // 504 // Usage: 505 // 506 // go get [-d] [-f] [-fix] [-insecure] [-t] [-u] [build flags] [packages] 507 // 508 // Get downloads the packages named by the import paths, along with their 509 // dependencies. It then installs the named packages, like 'go install'. 510 // 511 // The -d flag instructs get to stop after downloading the packages; that is, 512 // it instructs get not to install the packages. 513 // 514 // The -f flag, valid only when -u is set, forces get -u not to verify that 515 // each package has been checked out from the source control repository 516 // implied by its import path. This can be useful if the source is a local fork 517 // of the original. 518 // 519 // The -fix flag instructs get to run the fix tool on the downloaded packages 520 // before resolving dependencies or building the code. 521 // 522 // The -insecure flag permits fetching from repositories and resolving 523 // custom domains using insecure schemes such as HTTP. Use with caution. 524 // 525 // The -t flag instructs get to also download the packages required to build 526 // the tests for the specified packages. 527 // 528 // The -u flag instructs get to use the network to update the named packages 529 // and their dependencies. By default, get uses the network to check out 530 // missing packages but does not use it to look for updates to existing packages. 531 // 532 // The -v flag enables verbose progress and debug output. 533 // 534 // Get also accepts build flags to control the installation. See 'go help build'. 535 // 536 // When checking out a new package, get creates the target directory 537 // GOPATH/src/<import-path>. If the GOPATH contains multiple entries, 538 // get uses the first one. For more details see: 'go help gopath'. 539 // 540 // When checking out or updating a package, get looks for a branch or tag 541 // that matches the locally installed version of Go. The most important 542 // rule is that if the local installation is running version "go1", get 543 // searches for a branch or tag named "go1". If no such version exists 544 // it retrieves the default branch of the package. 545 // 546 // When go get checks out or updates a Git repository, 547 // it also updates any git submodules referenced by the repository. 548 // 549 // Get never checks out or updates code stored in vendor directories. 550 // 551 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 552 // 553 // For more about how 'go get' finds source code to 554 // download, see 'go help importpath'. 555 // 556 // See also: go build, go install, go clean. 557 // 558 // 559 // Compile and install packages and dependencies 560 // 561 // Usage: 562 // 563 // go install [-i] [build flags] [packages] 564 // 565 // Install compiles and installs the packages named by the import paths. 566 // 567 // The -i flag installs the dependencies of the named packages as well. 568 // 569 // For more about the build flags, see 'go help build'. 570 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 571 // 572 // See also: go build, go get, go clean. 573 // 574 // 575 // List packages 576 // 577 // Usage: 578 // 579 // go list [-deps] [-e] [-f format] [-json] [build flags] [packages] 580 // 581 // List lists the packages named by the import paths, one per line. 582 // 583 // The default output shows the package import path: 584 // 585 // bytes 586 // encoding/json 587 // github.com/gorilla/mux 588 // golang.org/x/net/html 589 // 590 // The -f flag specifies an alternate format for the list, using the 591 // syntax of package template. The default output is equivalent to -f 592 // '{{.ImportPath}}'. The struct being passed to the template is: 593 // 594 // type Package struct { 595 // Dir string // directory containing package sources 596 // ImportPath string // import path of package in dir 597 // ImportComment string // path in import comment on package statement 598 // Name string // package name 599 // Doc string // package documentation string 600 // Target string // install path 601 // Shlib string // the shared library that contains this package (only set when -linkshared) 602 // Goroot bool // is this package in the Go root? 603 // Standard bool // is this package part of the standard Go library? 604 // Stale bool // would 'go install' do anything for this package? 605 // StaleReason string // explanation for Stale==true 606 // Root string // Go root or Go path dir containing this package 607 // ConflictDir string // this directory shadows Dir in $GOPATH 608 // BinaryOnly bool // binary-only package: cannot be recompiled from sources 609 // 610 // // Source files 611 // GoFiles []string // .go source files (excluding CgoFiles, TestGoFiles, XTestGoFiles) 612 // CgoFiles []string // .go sources files that import "C" 613 // IgnoredGoFiles []string // .go sources ignored due to build constraints 614 // CFiles []string // .c source files 615 // CXXFiles []string // .cc, .cxx and .cpp source files 616 // MFiles []string // .m source files 617 // HFiles []string // .h, .hh, .hpp and .hxx source files 618 // FFiles []string // .f, .F, .for and .f90 Fortran source files 619 // SFiles []string // .s source files 620 // SwigFiles []string // .swig files 621 // SwigCXXFiles []string // .swigcxx files 622 // SysoFiles []string // .syso object files to add to archive 623 // TestGoFiles []string // _test.go files in package 624 // XTestGoFiles []string // _test.go files outside package 625 // 626 // // Cgo directives 627 // CgoCFLAGS []string // cgo: flags for C compiler 628 // CgoCPPFLAGS []string // cgo: flags for C preprocessor 629 // CgoCXXFLAGS []string // cgo: flags for C++ compiler 630 // CgoFFLAGS []string // cgo: flags for Fortran compiler 631 // CgoLDFLAGS []string // cgo: flags for linker 632 // CgoPkgConfig []string // cgo: pkg-config names 633 // 634 // // Dependency information 635 // Imports []string // import paths used by this package 636 // Deps []string // all (recursively) imported dependencies 637 // TestImports []string // imports from TestGoFiles 638 // XTestImports []string // imports from XTestGoFiles 639 // 640 // // Error information 641 // Incomplete bool // this package or a dependency has an error 642 // Error *PackageError // error loading package 643 // DepsErrors []*PackageError // errors loading dependencies 644 // } 645 // 646 // Packages stored in vendor directories report an ImportPath that includes the 647 // path to the vendor directory (for example, "d/vendor/p" instead of "p"), 648 // so that the ImportPath uniquely identifies a given copy of a package. 649 // The Imports, Deps, TestImports, and XTestImports lists also contain these 650 // expanded imports paths. See golang.org/s/go15vendor for more about vendoring. 651 // 652 // The error information, if any, is 653 // 654 // type PackageError struct { 655 // ImportStack []string // shortest path from package named on command line to this one 656 // Pos string // position of error (if present, file:line:col) 657 // Err string // the error itself 658 // } 659 // 660 // The template function "join" calls strings.Join. 661 // 662 // The template function "context" returns the build context, defined as: 663 // 664 // type Context struct { 665 // GOARCH string // target architecture 666 // GOOS string // target operating system 667 // GOROOT string // Go root 668 // GOPATH string // Go path 669 // CgoEnabled bool // whether cgo can be used 670 // UseAllFiles bool // use files regardless of +build lines, file names 671 // Compiler string // compiler to assume when computing target paths 672 // BuildTags []string // build constraints to match in +build lines 673 // ReleaseTags []string // releases the current release is compatible with 674 // InstallSuffix string // suffix to use in the name of the install dir 675 // } 676 // 677 // For more information about the meaning of these fields see the documentation 678 // for the go/build package's Context type. 679 // 680 // The -json flag causes the package data to be printed in JSON format 681 // instead of using the template format. 682 // 683 // The -deps flag causes list to add to its output all the dependencies of 684 // the packages named on the command line. 685 // 686 // The -e flag changes the handling of erroneous packages, those that 687 // cannot be found or are malformed. By default, the list command 688 // prints an error to standard error for each erroneous package and 689 // omits the packages from consideration during the usual printing. 690 // With the -e flag, the list command never prints errors to standard 691 // error and instead processes the erroneous packages with the usual 692 // printing. Erroneous packages will have a non-empty ImportPath and 693 // a non-nil Error field; other information may or may not be missing 694 // (zeroed). 695 // 696 // For more about build flags, see 'go help build'. 697 // 698 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 699 // 700 // 701 // Compile and run Go program 702 // 703 // Usage: 704 // 705 // go run [build flags] [-exec xprog] gofiles... [arguments...] 706 // 707 // Run compiles and runs the main package comprising the named Go source files. 708 // A Go source file is defined to be a file ending in a literal ".go" suffix. 709 // 710 // By default, 'go run' runs the compiled binary directly: 'a.out arguments...'. 711 // If the -exec flag is given, 'go run' invokes the binary using xprog: 712 // 'xprog a.out arguments...'. 713 // If the -exec flag is not given, GOOS or GOARCH is different from the system 714 // default, and a program named go_$GOOS_$GOARCH_exec can be found 715 // on the current search path, 'go run' invokes the binary using that program, 716 // for example 'go_nacl_386_exec a.out arguments...'. This allows execution of 717 // cross-compiled programs when a simulator or other execution method is 718 // available. 719 // 720 // For more about build flags, see 'go help build'. 721 // 722 // See also: go build. 723 // 724 // 725 // Test packages 726 // 727 // Usage: 728 // 729 // go test [build/test flags] [packages] [build/test flags & test binary flags] 730 // 731 // 'Go test' automates testing the packages named by the import paths. 732 // It prints a summary of the test results in the format: 733 // 734 // ok archive/tar 0.011s 735 // FAIL archive/zip 0.022s 736 // ok compress/gzip 0.033s 737 // ... 738 // 739 // followed by detailed output for each failed package. 740 // 741 // 'Go test' recompiles each package along with any files with names matching 742 // the file pattern "*_test.go". 743 // These additional files can contain test functions, benchmark functions, and 744 // example functions. See 'go help testfunc' for more. 745 // Each listed package causes the execution of a separate test binary. 746 // Files whose names begin with "_" (including "_test.go") or "." are ignored. 747 // 748 // Test files that declare a package with the suffix "_test" will be compiled as a 749 // separate package, and then linked and run with the main test binary. 750 // 751 // The go tool will ignore a directory named "testdata", making it available 752 // to hold ancillary data needed by the tests. 753 // 754 // As part of building a test binary, go test runs go vet on the package 755 // and its test source files to identify significant problems. If go vet 756 // finds any problems, go test reports those and does not run the test binary. 757 // Only a high-confidence subset of the default go vet checks are used. 758 // To disable the running of go vet, use the -vet=off flag. 759 // 760 // Go test runs in two different modes: local directory mode when invoked with 761 // no package arguments (for example, 'go test'), and package list mode when 762 // invoked with package arguments (for example 'go test math', 'go test ./...', 763 // and even 'go test .'). 764 // 765 // In local directory mode, go test compiles and tests the package sources 766 // found in the current directory and then runs the resulting test binary. 767 // In this mode, caching (discussed below) is disabled. After the package test 768 // finishes, go test prints a summary line showing the test status ('ok' or 'FAIL'), 769 // package name, and elapsed time. 770 // 771 // In package list mode, go test compiles and tests each of the packages 772 // listed on the command line. If a package test passes, go test prints only 773 // the final 'ok' summary line. If a package test fails, go test prints the 774 // full test output. If invoked with the -bench or -v flag, go test prints 775 // the full output even for passing package tests, in order to display the 776 // requested benchmark results or verbose logging. 777 // 778 // All test output and summary lines are printed to the go command's standard 779 // output, even if the test printed them to its own standard error. 780 // (The go command's standard error is reserved for printing errors building 781 // the tests.) 782 // 783 // In package list mode, go test also caches successful package test results. 784 // If go test has cached a previous test run using the same test binary and 785 // the same command line consisting entirely of cacheable test flags 786 // (defined as -cpu, -list, -parallel, -run, -short, and -v), 787 // go test will redisplay the previous output instead of running the test 788 // binary again. In the summary line, go test prints '(cached)' in place of 789 // the elapsed time. To disable test caching, use any test flag or argument 790 // other than the cacheable flags. The idiomatic way to disable test caching 791 // explicitly is to use -count=1. A cached result is treated as executing in 792 // no time at all, so a successful package test result will be cached and reused 793 // regardless of -timeout setting. 794 // 795 // In addition to the build flags, the flags handled by 'go test' itself are: 796 // 797 // -args 798 // Pass the remainder of the command line (everything after -args) 799 // to the test binary, uninterpreted and unchanged. 800 // Because this flag consumes the remainder of the command line, 801 // the package list (if present) must appear before this flag. 802 // 803 // -c 804 // Compile the test binary to pkg.test but do not run it 805 // (where pkg is the last element of the package's import path). 806 // The file name can be changed with the -o flag. 807 // 808 // -exec xprog 809 // Run the test binary using xprog. The behavior is the same as 810 // in 'go run'. See 'go help run' for details. 811 // 812 // -i 813 // Install packages that are dependencies of the test. 814 // Do not run the test. 815 // 816 // -json 817 // Convert test output to JSON suitable for automated processing. 818 // See 'go doc test2json' for the encoding details. 819 // 820 // -o file 821 // Compile the test binary to the named file. 822 // The test still runs (unless -c or -i is specified). 823 // 824 // The test binary also accepts flags that control execution of the test; these 825 // flags are also accessible by 'go test'. See 'go help testflag' for details. 826 // 827 // For more about build flags, see 'go help build'. 828 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 829 // 830 // See also: go build, go vet. 831 // 832 // 833 // Run specified go tool 834 // 835 // Usage: 836 // 837 // go tool [-n] command [args...] 838 // 839 // Tool runs the go tool command identified by the arguments. 840 // With no arguments it prints the list of known tools. 841 // 842 // The -n flag causes tool to print the command that would be 843 // executed but not execute it. 844 // 845 // For more about each tool command, see 'go doc cmd/<command>'. 846 // 847 // 848 // Print Go version 849 // 850 // Usage: 851 // 852 // go version 853 // 854 // Version prints the Go version, as reported by runtime.Version. 855 // 856 // 857 // Report likely mistakes in packages 858 // 859 // Usage: 860 // 861 // go vet [-n] [-x] [build flags] [vet flags] [packages] 862 // 863 // Vet runs the Go vet command on the packages named by the import paths. 864 // 865 // For more about vet and its flags, see 'go doc cmd/vet'. 866 // For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'. 867 // 868 // The -n flag prints commands that would be executed. 869 // The -x flag prints commands as they are executed. 870 // 871 // The build flags supported by go vet are those that control package resolution 872 // and execution, such as -n, -x, -v, -tags, and -toolexec. 873 // For more about these flags, see 'go help build'. 874 // 875 // See also: go fmt, go fix. 876 // 877 // 878 // Calling between Go and C 879 // 880 // There are two different ways to call between Go and C/C++ code. 881 // 882 // The first is the cgo tool, which is part of the Go distribution. For 883 // information on how to use it see the cgo documentation (go doc cmd/cgo). 884 // 885 // The second is the SWIG program, which is a general tool for 886 // interfacing between languages. For information on SWIG see 887 // http://swig.org/. When running go build, any file with a .swig 888 // extension will be passed to SWIG. Any file with a .swigcxx extension 889 // will be passed to SWIG with the -c++ option. 890 // 891 // When either cgo or SWIG is used, go build will pass any .c, .m, .s, 892 // or .S files to the C compiler, and any .cc, .cpp, .cxx files to the C++ 893 // compiler. The CC or CXX environment variables may be set to determine 894 // the C or C++ compiler, respectively, to use. 895 // 896 // 897 // Description of build modes 898 // 899 // The 'go build' and 'go install' commands take a -buildmode argument which 900 // indicates which kind of object file is to be built. Currently supported values 901 // are: 902 // 903 // -buildmode=archive 904 // Build the listed non-main packages into .a files. Packages named 905 // main are ignored. 906 // 907 // -buildmode=c-archive 908 // Build the listed main package, plus all packages it imports, 909 // into a C archive file. The only callable symbols will be those 910 // functions exported using a cgo //export comment. Requires 911 // exactly one main package to be listed. 912 // 913 // -buildmode=c-shared 914 // Build the listed main package, plus all packages it imports, 915 // into a C shared library. The only callable symbols will 916 // be those functions exported using a cgo //export comment. 917 // Requires exactly one main package to be listed. 918 // 919 // -buildmode=default 920 // Listed main packages are built into executables and listed 921 // non-main packages are built into .a files (the default 922 // behavior). 923 // 924 // -buildmode=shared 925 // Combine all the listed non-main packages into a single shared 926 // library that will be used when building with the -linkshared 927 // option. Packages named main are ignored. 928 // 929 // -buildmode=exe 930 // Build the listed main packages and everything they import into 931 // executables. Packages not named main are ignored. 932 // 933 // -buildmode=pie 934 // Build the listed main packages and everything they import into 935 // position independent executables (PIE). Packages not named 936 // main are ignored. 937 // 938 // -buildmode=plugin 939 // Build the listed main packages, plus all packages that they 940 // import, into a Go plugin. Packages not named main are ignored. 941 // 942 // 943 // File types 944 // 945 // The go command examines the contents of a restricted set of files 946 // in each directory. It identifies which files to examine based on 947 // the extension of the file name. These extensions are: 948 // 949 // .go 950 // Go source files. 951 // .c, .h 952 // C source files. 953 // If the package uses cgo or SWIG, these will be compiled with the 954 // OS-native compiler (typically gcc); otherwise they will 955 // trigger an error. 956 // .cc, .cpp, .cxx, .hh, .hpp, .hxx 957 // C++ source files. Only useful with cgo or SWIG, and always 958 // compiled with the OS-native compiler. 959 // .m 960 // Objective-C source files. Only useful with cgo, and always 961 // compiled with the OS-native compiler. 962 // .s, .S 963 // Assembler source files. 964 // If the package uses cgo or SWIG, these will be assembled with the 965 // OS-native assembler (typically gcc (sic)); otherwise they 966 // will be assembled with the Go assembler. 967 // .swig, .swigcxx 968 // SWIG definition files. 969 // .syso 970 // System object files. 971 // 972 // Files of each of these types except .syso may contain build 973 // constraints, but the go command stops scanning for build constraints 974 // at the first item in the file that is not a blank line or //-style 975 // line comment. See the go/build package documentation for 976 // more details. 977 // 978 // Non-test Go source files can also include a //go:binary-only-package 979 // comment, indicating that the package sources are included 980 // for documentation only and must not be used to build the 981 // package binary. This enables distribution of Go packages in 982 // their compiled form alone. Even binary-only packages require 983 // accurate import blocks listing required dependencies, so that 984 // those dependencies can be supplied when linking the resulting 985 // command. 986 // 987 // 988 // GOPATH environment variable 989 // 990 // The Go path is used to resolve import statements. 991 // It is implemented by and documented in the go/build package. 992 // 993 // The GOPATH environment variable lists places to look for Go code. 994 // On Unix, the value is a colon-separated string. 995 // On Windows, the value is a semicolon-separated string. 996 // On Plan 9, the value is a list. 997 // 998 // If the environment variable is unset, GOPATH defaults 999 // to a subdirectory named "go" in the user's home directory 1000 // ($HOME/go on Unix, %USERPROFILE%\go on Windows), 1001 // unless that directory holds a Go distribution. 1002 // Run "go env GOPATH" to see the current GOPATH. 1003 // 1004 // See https://golang.org/wiki/SettingGOPATH to set a custom GOPATH. 1005 // 1006 // Each directory listed in GOPATH must have a prescribed structure: 1007 // 1008 // The src directory holds source code. The path below src 1009 // determines the import path or executable name. 1010 // 1011 // The pkg directory holds installed package objects. 1012 // As in the Go tree, each target operating system and 1013 // architecture pair has its own subdirectory of pkg 1014 // (pkg/GOOS_GOARCH). 1015 // 1016 // If DIR is a directory listed in the GOPATH, a package with 1017 // source in DIR/src/foo/bar can be imported as "foo/bar" and 1018 // has its compiled form installed to "DIR/pkg/GOOS_GOARCH/foo/bar.a". 1019 // 1020 // The bin directory holds compiled commands. 1021 // Each command is named for its source directory, but only 1022 // the final element, not the entire path. That is, the 1023 // command with source in DIR/src/foo/quux is installed into 1024 // DIR/bin/quux, not DIR/bin/foo/quux. The "foo/" prefix is stripped 1025 // so that you can add DIR/bin to your PATH to get at the 1026 // installed commands. If the GOBIN environment variable is 1027 // set, commands are installed to the directory it names instead 1028 // of DIR/bin. GOBIN must be an absolute path. 1029 // 1030 // Here's an example directory layout: 1031 // 1032 // GOPATH=/home/user/go 1033 // 1034 // /home/user/go/ 1035 // src/ 1036 // foo/ 1037 // bar/ (go code in package bar) 1038 // x.go 1039 // quux/ (go code in package main) 1040 // y.go 1041 // bin/ 1042 // quux (installed command) 1043 // pkg/ 1044 // linux_amd64/ 1045 // foo/ 1046 // bar.a (installed package object) 1047 // 1048 // Go searches each directory listed in GOPATH to find source code, 1049 // but new packages are always downloaded into the first directory 1050 // in the list. 1051 // 1052 // See https://golang.org/doc/code.html for an example. 1053 // 1054 // Internal Directories 1055 // 1056 // Code in or below a directory named "internal" is importable only 1057 // by code in the directory tree rooted at the parent of "internal". 1058 // Here's an extended version of the directory layout above: 1059 // 1060 // /home/user/go/ 1061 // src/ 1062 // crash/ 1063 // bang/ (go code in package bang) 1064 // b.go 1065 // foo/ (go code in package foo) 1066 // f.go 1067 // bar/ (go code in package bar) 1068 // x.go 1069 // internal/ 1070 // baz/ (go code in package baz) 1071 // z.go 1072 // quux/ (go code in package main) 1073 // y.go 1074 // 1075 // 1076 // The code in z.go is imported as "foo/internal/baz", but that 1077 // import statement can only appear in source files in the subtree 1078 // rooted at foo. The source files foo/f.go, foo/bar/x.go, and 1079 // foo/quux/y.go can all import "foo/internal/baz", but the source file 1080 // crash/bang/b.go cannot. 1081 // 1082 // See https://golang.org/s/go14internal for details. 1083 // 1084 // Vendor Directories 1085 // 1086 // Go 1.6 includes support for using local copies of external dependencies 1087 // to satisfy imports of those dependencies, often referred to as vendoring. 1088 // 1089 // Code below a directory named "vendor" is importable only 1090 // by code in the directory tree rooted at the parent of "vendor", 1091 // and only using an import path that omits the prefix up to and 1092 // including the vendor element. 1093 // 1094 // Here's the example from the previous section, 1095 // but with the "internal" directory renamed to "vendor" 1096 // and a new foo/vendor/crash/bang directory added: 1097 // 1098 // /home/user/go/ 1099 // src/ 1100 // crash/ 1101 // bang/ (go code in package bang) 1102 // b.go 1103 // foo/ (go code in package foo) 1104 // f.go 1105 // bar/ (go code in package bar) 1106 // x.go 1107 // vendor/ 1108 // crash/ 1109 // bang/ (go code in package bang) 1110 // b.go 1111 // baz/ (go code in package baz) 1112 // z.go 1113 // quux/ (go code in package main) 1114 // y.go 1115 // 1116 // The same visibility rules apply as for internal, but the code 1117 // in z.go is imported as "baz", not as "foo/vendor/baz". 1118 // 1119 // Code in vendor directories deeper in the source tree shadows 1120 // code in higher directories. Within the subtree rooted at foo, an import 1121 // of "crash/bang" resolves to "foo/vendor/crash/bang", not the 1122 // top-level "crash/bang". 1123 // 1124 // Code in vendor directories is not subject to import path 1125 // checking (see 'go help importpath'). 1126 // 1127 // When 'go get' checks out or updates a git repository, it now also 1128 // updates submodules. 1129 // 1130 // Vendor directories do not affect the placement of new repositories 1131 // being checked out for the first time by 'go get': those are always 1132 // placed in the main GOPATH, never in a vendor subtree. 1133 // 1134 // See https://golang.org/s/go15vendor for details. 1135 // 1136 // 1137 // Environment variables 1138 // 1139 // The go command, and the tools it invokes, examine a few different 1140 // environment variables. For many of these, you can see the default 1141 // value of on your system by running 'go env NAME', where NAME is the 1142 // name of the variable. 1143 // 1144 // General-purpose environment variables: 1145 // 1146 // GCCGO 1147 // The gccgo command to run for 'go build -compiler=gccgo'. 1148 // GOARCH 1149 // The architecture, or processor, for which to compile code. 1150 // Examples are amd64, 386, arm, ppc64. 1151 // GOBIN 1152 // The directory where 'go install' will install a command. 1153 // GOOS 1154 // The operating system for which to compile code. 1155 // Examples are linux, darwin, windows, netbsd. 1156 // GOPATH 1157 // For more details see: 'go help gopath'. 1158 // GORACE 1159 // Options for the race detector. 1160 // See https://golang.org/doc/articles/race_detector.html. 1161 // GOROOT 1162 // The root of the go tree. 1163 // GOTMPDIR 1164 // The directory where the go command will write 1165 // temporary source files, packages, and binaries. 1166 // GOCACHE 1167 // The directory where the go command will store 1168 // cached information for reuse in future builds. 1169 // 1170 // Environment variables for use with cgo: 1171 // 1172 // CC 1173 // The command to use to compile C code. 1174 // CGO_ENABLED 1175 // Whether the cgo command is supported. Either 0 or 1. 1176 // CGO_CFLAGS 1177 // Flags that cgo will pass to the compiler when compiling 1178 // C code. 1179 // CGO_CPPFLAGS 1180 // Flags that cgo will pass to the compiler when compiling 1181 // C or C++ code. 1182 // CGO_CXXFLAGS 1183 // Flags that cgo will pass to the compiler when compiling 1184 // C++ code. 1185 // CGO_FFLAGS 1186 // Flags that cgo will pass to the compiler when compiling 1187 // Fortran code. 1188 // CGO_LDFLAGS 1189 // Flags that cgo will pass to the compiler when linking. 1190 // CXX 1191 // The command to use to compile C++ code. 1192 // PKG_CONFIG 1193 // Path to pkg-config tool. 1194 // 1195 // Architecture-specific environment variables: 1196 // 1197 // GOARM 1198 // For GOARCH=arm, the ARM architecture for which to compile. 1199 // Valid values are 5, 6, 7. 1200 // GO386 1201 // For GOARCH=386, the floating point instruction set. 1202 // Valid values are 387, sse2. 1203 // 1204 // Special-purpose environment variables: 1205 // 1206 // GOROOT_FINAL 1207 // The root of the installed Go tree, when it is 1208 // installed in a location other than where it is built. 1209 // File names in stack traces are rewritten from GOROOT to 1210 // GOROOT_FINAL. 1211 // GO_EXTLINK_ENABLED 1212 // Whether the linker should use external linking mode 1213 // when using -linkmode=auto with code that uses cgo. 1214 // Set to 0 to disable external linking mode, 1 to enable it. 1215 // GIT_ALLOW_PROTOCOL 1216 // Defined by Git. A colon-separated list of schemes that are allowed to be used 1217 // with git fetch/clone. If set, any scheme not explicitly mentioned will be 1218 // considered insecure by 'go get'. 1219 // 1220 // 1221 // Import path syntax 1222 // 1223 // An import path (see 'go help packages') denotes a package stored in the local 1224 // file system. In general, an import path denotes either a standard package (such 1225 // as "unicode/utf8") or a package found in one of the work spaces (For more 1226 // details see: 'go help gopath'). 1227 // 1228 // Relative import paths 1229 // 1230 // An import path beginning with ./ or ../ is called a relative path. 1231 // The toolchain supports relative import paths as a shortcut in two ways. 1232 // 1233 // First, a relative path can be used as a shorthand on the command line. 1234 // If you are working in the directory containing the code imported as 1235 // "unicode" and want to run the tests for "unicode/utf8", you can type 1236 // "go test ./utf8" instead of needing to specify the full path. 1237 // Similarly, in the reverse situation, "go test .." will test "unicode" from 1238 // the "unicode/utf8" directory. Relative patterns are also allowed, like 1239 // "go test ./..." to test all subdirectories. See 'go help packages' for details 1240 // on the pattern syntax. 1241 // 1242 // Second, if you are compiling a Go program not in a work space, 1243 // you can use a relative path in an import statement in that program 1244 // to refer to nearby code also not in a work space. 1245 // This makes it easy to experiment with small multipackage programs 1246 // outside of the usual work spaces, but such programs cannot be 1247 // installed with "go install" (there is no work space in which to install them), 1248 // so they are rebuilt from scratch each time they are built. 1249 // To avoid ambiguity, Go programs cannot use relative import paths 1250 // within a work space. 1251 // 1252 // Remote import paths 1253 // 1254 // Certain import paths also 1255 // describe how to obtain the source code for the package using 1256 // a revision control system. 1257 // 1258 // A few common code hosting sites have special syntax: 1259 // 1260 // Bitbucket (Git, Mercurial) 1261 // 1262 // import "bitbucket.org/user/project" 1263 // import "bitbucket.org/user/project/sub/directory" 1264 // 1265 // GitHub (Git) 1266 // 1267 // import "github.com/user/project" 1268 // import "github.com/user/project/sub/directory" 1269 // 1270 // Launchpad (Bazaar) 1271 // 1272 // import "launchpad.net/project" 1273 // import "launchpad.net/project/series" 1274 // import "launchpad.net/project/series/sub/directory" 1275 // 1276 // import "launchpad.net/~user/project/branch" 1277 // import "launchpad.net/~user/project/branch/sub/directory" 1278 // 1279 // IBM DevOps Services (Git) 1280 // 1281 // import "hub.jazz.net/git/user/project" 1282 // import "hub.jazz.net/git/user/project/sub/directory" 1283 // 1284 // For code hosted on other servers, import paths may either be qualified 1285 // with the version control type, or the go tool can dynamically fetch 1286 // the import path over https/http and discover where the code resides 1287 // from a <meta> tag in the HTML. 1288 // 1289 // To declare the code location, an import path of the form 1290 // 1291 // repository.vcs/path 1292 // 1293 // specifies the given repository, with or without the .vcs suffix, 1294 // using the named version control system, and then the path inside 1295 // that repository. The supported version control systems are: 1296 // 1297 // Bazaar .bzr 1298 // Git .git 1299 // Mercurial .hg 1300 // Subversion .svn 1301 // 1302 // For example, 1303 // 1304 // import "example.org/user/foo.hg" 1305 // 1306 // denotes the root directory of the Mercurial repository at 1307 // example.org/user/foo or foo.hg, and 1308 // 1309 // import "example.org/repo.git/foo/bar" 1310 // 1311 // denotes the foo/bar directory of the Git repository at 1312 // example.org/repo or repo.git. 1313 // 1314 // When a version control system supports multiple protocols, 1315 // each is tried in turn when downloading. For example, a Git 1316 // download tries https://, then git+ssh://. 1317 // 1318 // By default, downloads are restricted to known secure protocols 1319 // (e.g. https, ssh). To override this setting for Git downloads, the 1320 // GIT_ALLOW_PROTOCOL environment variable can be set (For more details see: 1321 // 'go help environment'). 1322 // 1323 // If the import path is not a known code hosting site and also lacks a 1324 // version control qualifier, the go tool attempts to fetch the import 1325 // over https/http and looks for a <meta> tag in the document's HTML 1326 // <head>. 1327 // 1328 // The meta tag has the form: 1329 // 1330 // <meta name="go-import" content="import-prefix vcs repo-root"> 1331 // 1332 // The import-prefix is the import path corresponding to the repository 1333 // root. It must be a prefix or an exact match of the package being 1334 // fetched with "go get". If it's not an exact match, another http 1335 // request is made at the prefix to verify the <meta> tags match. 1336 // 1337 // The meta tag should appear as early in the file as possible. 1338 // In particular, it should appear before any raw JavaScript or CSS, 1339 // to avoid confusing the go command's restricted parser. 1340 // 1341 // The vcs is one of "git", "hg", "svn", etc, 1342 // 1343 // The repo-root is the root of the version control system 1344 // containing a scheme and not containing a .vcs qualifier. 1345 // 1346 // For example, 1347 // 1348 // import "example.org/pkg/foo" 1349 // 1350 // will result in the following requests: 1351 // 1352 // https://example.org/pkg/foo?go-get=1 (preferred) 1353 // http://example.org/pkg/foo?go-get=1 (fallback, only with -insecure) 1354 // 1355 // If that page contains the meta tag 1356 // 1357 // <meta name="go-import" content="example.org git https://code.org/r/p/exproj"> 1358 // 1359 // the go tool will verify that https://example.org/?go-get=1 contains the 1360 // same meta tag and then git clone https://code.org/r/p/exproj into 1361 // GOPATH/src/example.org. 1362 // 1363 // New downloaded packages are written to the first directory listed in the GOPATH 1364 // environment variable (For more details see: 'go help gopath'). 1365 // 1366 // The go command attempts to download the version of the 1367 // package appropriate for the Go release being used. 1368 // Run 'go help get' for more. 1369 // 1370 // Import path checking 1371 // 1372 // When the custom import path feature described above redirects to a 1373 // known code hosting site, each of the resulting packages has two possible 1374 // import paths, using the custom domain or the known hosting site. 1375 // 1376 // A package statement is said to have an "import comment" if it is immediately 1377 // followed (before the next newline) by a comment of one of these two forms: 1378 // 1379 // package math // import "path" 1380 // package math /* import "path" */ 1381 // 1382 // The go command will refuse to install a package with an import comment 1383 // unless it is being referred to by that import path. In this way, import comments 1384 // let package authors make sure the custom import path is used and not a 1385 // direct path to the underlying code hosting site. 1386 // 1387 // Import path checking is disabled for code found within vendor trees. 1388 // This makes it possible to copy code into alternate locations in vendor trees 1389 // without needing to update import comments. 1390 // 1391 // See https://golang.org/s/go14customimport for details. 1392 // 1393 // 1394 // Description of package lists 1395 // 1396 // Many commands apply to a set of packages: 1397 // 1398 // go action [packages] 1399 // 1400 // Usually, [packages] is a list of import paths. 1401 // 1402 // An import path that is a rooted path or that begins with 1403 // a . or .. element is interpreted as a file system path and 1404 // denotes the package in that directory. 1405 // 1406 // Otherwise, the import path P denotes the package found in 1407 // the directory DIR/src/P for some DIR listed in the GOPATH 1408 // environment variable (For more details see: 'go help gopath'). 1409 // 1410 // If no import paths are given, the action applies to the 1411 // package in the current directory. 1412 // 1413 // There are four reserved names for paths that should not be used 1414 // for packages to be built with the go tool: 1415 // 1416 // - "main" denotes the top-level package in a stand-alone executable. 1417 // 1418 // - "all" expands to all package directories found in all the GOPATH 1419 // trees. For example, 'go list all' lists all the packages on the local 1420 // system. 1421 // 1422 // - "std" is like all but expands to just the packages in the standard 1423 // Go library. 1424 // 1425 // - "cmd" expands to the Go repository's commands and their 1426 // internal libraries. 1427 // 1428 // Import paths beginning with "cmd/" only match source code in 1429 // the Go repository. 1430 // 1431 // An import path is a pattern if it includes one or more "..." wildcards, 1432 // each of which can match any string, including the empty string and 1433 // strings containing slashes. Such a pattern expands to all package 1434 // directories found in the GOPATH trees with names matching the 1435 // patterns. 1436 // 1437 // To make common patterns more convenient, there are two special cases. 1438 // First, /... at the end of the pattern can match an empty string, 1439 // so that net/... matches both net and packages in its subdirectories, like net/http. 1440 // Second, any slash-separated pattern element containing a wildcard never 1441 // participates in a match of the "vendor" element in the path of a vendored 1442 // package, so that ./... does not match packages in subdirectories of 1443 // ./vendor or ./mycode/vendor, but ./vendor/... and ./mycode/vendor/... do. 1444 // Note, however, that a directory named vendor that itself contains code 1445 // is not a vendored package: cmd/vendor would be a command named vendor, 1446 // and the pattern cmd/... matches it. 1447 // See golang.org/s/go15vendor for more about vendoring. 1448 // 1449 // An import path can also name a package to be downloaded from 1450 // a remote repository. Run 'go help importpath' for details. 1451 // 1452 // Every package in a program must have a unique import path. 1453 // By convention, this is arranged by starting each path with a 1454 // unique prefix that belongs to you. For example, paths used 1455 // internally at Google all begin with 'google', and paths 1456 // denoting remote repositories begin with the path to the code, 1457 // such as 'github.com/user/repo'. 1458 // 1459 // Packages in a program need not have unique package names, 1460 // but there are two reserved package names with special meaning. 1461 // The name main indicates a command, not a library. 1462 // Commands are built into binaries and cannot be imported. 1463 // The name documentation indicates documentation for 1464 // a non-Go program in the directory. Files in package documentation 1465 // are ignored by the go command. 1466 // 1467 // As a special case, if the package list is a list of .go files from a 1468 // single directory, the command is applied to a single synthesized 1469 // package made up of exactly those files, ignoring any build constraints 1470 // in those files and ignoring any other files in the directory. 1471 // 1472 // Directory and file names that begin with "." or "_" are ignored 1473 // by the go tool, as are directories named "testdata". 1474 // 1475 // 1476 // Description of testing flags 1477 // 1478 // The 'go test' command takes both flags that apply to 'go test' itself 1479 // and flags that apply to the resulting test binary. 1480 // 1481 // Several of the flags control profiling and write an execution profile 1482 // suitable for "go tool pprof"; run "go tool pprof -h" for more 1483 // information. The --alloc_space, --alloc_objects, and --show_bytes 1484 // options of pprof control how the information is presented. 1485 // 1486 // The following flags are recognized by the 'go test' command and 1487 // control the execution of any test: 1488 // 1489 // -bench regexp 1490 // Run only those benchmarks matching a regular expression. 1491 // By default, no benchmarks are run. 1492 // To run all benchmarks, use '-bench .' or '-bench=.'. 1493 // The regular expression is split by unbracketed slash (/) 1494 // characters into a sequence of regular expressions, and each 1495 // part of a benchmark's identifier must match the corresponding 1496 // element in the sequence, if any. Possible parents of matches 1497 // are run with b.N=1 to identify sub-benchmarks. For example, 1498 // given -bench=X/Y, top-level benchmarks matching X are run 1499 // with b.N=1 to find any sub-benchmarks matching Y, which are 1500 // then run in full. 1501 // 1502 // -benchtime t 1503 // Run enough iterations of each benchmark to take t, specified 1504 // as a time.Duration (for example, -benchtime 1h30s). 1505 // The default is 1 second (1s). 1506 // 1507 // -count n 1508 // Run each test and benchmark n times (default 1). 1509 // If -cpu is set, run n times for each GOMAXPROCS value. 1510 // Examples are always run once. 1511 // 1512 // -cover 1513 // Enable coverage analysis. 1514 // Note that because coverage works by annotating the source 1515 // code before compilation, compilation and test failures with 1516 // coverage enabled may report line numbers that don't correspond 1517 // to the original sources. 1518 // 1519 // -covermode set,count,atomic 1520 // Set the mode for coverage analysis for the package[s] 1521 // being tested. The default is "set" unless -race is enabled, 1522 // in which case it is "atomic". 1523 // The values: 1524 // set: bool: does this statement run? 1525 // count: int: how many times does this statement run? 1526 // atomic: int: count, but correct in multithreaded tests; 1527 // significantly more expensive. 1528 // Sets -cover. 1529 // 1530 // -coverpkg pattern1,pattern2,pattern3 1531 // Apply coverage analysis in each test to packages matching the patterns. 1532 // The default is for each test to analyze only the package being tested. 1533 // See 'go help packages' for a description of package patterns. 1534 // Sets -cover. 1535 // 1536 // -cpu 1,2,4 1537 // Specify a list of GOMAXPROCS values for which the tests or 1538 // benchmarks should be executed. The default is the current value 1539 // of GOMAXPROCS. 1540 // 1541 // -list regexp 1542 // List tests, benchmarks, or examples matching the regular expression. 1543 // No tests, benchmarks or examples will be run. This will only 1544 // list top-level tests. No subtest or subbenchmarks will be shown. 1545 // 1546 // -parallel n 1547 // Allow parallel execution of test functions that call t.Parallel. 1548 // The value of this flag is the maximum number of tests to run 1549 // simultaneously; by default, it is set to the value of GOMAXPROCS. 1550 // Note that -parallel only applies within a single test binary. 1551 // The 'go test' command may run tests for different packages 1552 // in parallel as well, according to the setting of the -p flag 1553 // (see 'go help build'). 1554 // 1555 // -run regexp 1556 // Run only those tests and examples matching the regular expression. 1557 // For tests, the regular expression is split by unbracketed slash (/) 1558 // characters into a sequence of regular expressions, and each part 1559 // of a test's identifier must match the corresponding element in 1560 // the sequence, if any. Note that possible parents of matches are 1561 // run too, so that -run=X/Y matches and runs and reports the result 1562 // of all tests matching X, even those without sub-tests matching Y, 1563 // because it must run them to look for those sub-tests. 1564 // 1565 // -short 1566 // Tell long-running tests to shorten their run time. 1567 // It is off by default but set during all.bash so that installing 1568 // the Go tree can run a sanity check but not spend time running 1569 // exhaustive tests. 1570 // 1571 // -timeout d 1572 // If a test binary runs longer than duration d, panic. 1573 // The default is 10 minutes (10m). 1574 // 1575 // -v 1576 // Verbose output: log all tests as they are run. Also print all 1577 // text from Log and Logf calls even if the test succeeds. 1578 // 1579 // -vet list 1580 // Configure the invocation of "go vet" during "go test" 1581 // to use the comma-separated list of vet checks. 1582 // If list is empty, "go test" runs "go vet" with a curated list of 1583 // checks believed to be always worth addressing. 1584 // If list is "off", "go test" does not run "go vet" at all. 1585 // 1586 // The following flags are also recognized by 'go test' and can be used to 1587 // profile the tests during execution: 1588 // 1589 // -benchmem 1590 // Print memory allocation statistics for benchmarks. 1591 // 1592 // -blockprofile block.out 1593 // Write a goroutine blocking profile to the specified file 1594 // when all tests are complete. 1595 // Writes test binary as -c would. 1596 // 1597 // -blockprofilerate n 1598 // Control the detail provided in goroutine blocking profiles by 1599 // calling runtime.SetBlockProfileRate with n. 1600 // See 'go doc runtime.SetBlockProfileRate'. 1601 // The profiler aims to sample, on average, one blocking event every 1602 // n nanoseconds the program spends blocked. By default, 1603 // if -test.blockprofile is set without this flag, all blocking events 1604 // are recorded, equivalent to -test.blockprofilerate=1. 1605 // 1606 // -coverprofile cover.out 1607 // Write a coverage profile to the file after all tests have passed. 1608 // Sets -cover. 1609 // 1610 // -cpuprofile cpu.out 1611 // Write a CPU profile to the specified file before exiting. 1612 // Writes test binary as -c would. 1613 // 1614 // -memprofile mem.out 1615 // Write a memory profile to the file after all tests have passed. 1616 // Writes test binary as -c would. 1617 // 1618 // -memprofilerate n 1619 // Enable more precise (and expensive) memory profiles by setting 1620 // runtime.MemProfileRate. See 'go doc runtime.MemProfileRate'. 1621 // To profile all memory allocations, use -test.memprofilerate=1 1622 // and pass --alloc_space flag to the pprof tool. 1623 // 1624 // -mutexprofile mutex.out 1625 // Write a mutex contention profile to the specified file 1626 // when all tests are complete. 1627 // Writes test binary as -c would. 1628 // 1629 // -mutexprofilefraction n 1630 // Sample 1 in n stack traces of goroutines holding a 1631 // contended mutex. 1632 // 1633 // -outputdir directory 1634 // Place output files from profiling in the specified directory, 1635 // by default the directory in which "go test" is running. 1636 // 1637 // -trace trace.out 1638 // Write an execution trace to the specified file before exiting. 1639 // 1640 // Each of these flags is also recognized with an optional 'test.' prefix, 1641 // as in -test.v. When invoking the generated test binary (the result of 1642 // 'go test -c') directly, however, the prefix is mandatory. 1643 // 1644 // The 'go test' command rewrites or removes recognized flags, 1645 // as appropriate, both before and after the optional package list, 1646 // before invoking the test binary. 1647 // 1648 // For instance, the command 1649 // 1650 // go test -v -myflag testdata -cpuprofile=prof.out -x 1651 // 1652 // will compile the test binary and then run it as 1653 // 1654 // pkg.test -test.v -myflag testdata -test.cpuprofile=prof.out 1655 // 1656 // (The -x flag is removed because it applies only to the go command's 1657 // execution, not to the test itself.) 1658 // 1659 // The test flags that generate profiles (other than for coverage) also 1660 // leave the test binary in pkg.test for use when analyzing the profiles. 1661 // 1662 // When 'go test' runs a test binary, it does so from within the 1663 // corresponding package's source code directory. Depending on the test, 1664 // it may be necessary to do the same when invoking a generated test 1665 // binary directly. 1666 // 1667 // The command-line package list, if present, must appear before any 1668 // flag not known to the go test command. Continuing the example above, 1669 // the package list would have to appear before -myflag, but could appear 1670 // on either side of -v. 1671 // 1672 // To keep an argument for a test binary from being interpreted as a 1673 // known flag or a package name, use -args (see 'go help test') which 1674 // passes the remainder of the command line through to the test binary 1675 // uninterpreted and unaltered. 1676 // 1677 // For instance, the command 1678 // 1679 // go test -v -args -x -v 1680 // 1681 // will compile the test binary and then run it as 1682 // 1683 // pkg.test -test.v -x -v 1684 // 1685 // Similarly, 1686 // 1687 // go test -args math 1688 // 1689 // will compile the test binary and then run it as 1690 // 1691 // pkg.test math 1692 // 1693 // In the first example, the -x and the second -v are passed through to the 1694 // test binary unchanged and with no effect on the go command itself. 1695 // In the second example, the argument math is passed through to the test 1696 // binary, instead of being interpreted as the package list. 1697 // 1698 // 1699 // Description of testing functions 1700 // 1701 // The 'go test' command expects to find test, benchmark, and example functions 1702 // in the "*_test.go" files corresponding to the package under test. 1703 // 1704 // A test function is one named TestXXX (where XXX is any alphanumeric string 1705 // not starting with a lower case letter) and should have the signature, 1706 // 1707 // func TestXXX(t *testing.T) { ... } 1708 // 1709 // A benchmark function is one named BenchmarkXXX and should have the signature, 1710 // 1711 // func BenchmarkXXX(b *testing.B) { ... } 1712 // 1713 // An example function is similar to a test function but, instead of using 1714 // *testing.T to report success or failure, prints output to os.Stdout. 1715 // If the last comment in the function starts with "Output:" then the output 1716 // is compared exactly against the comment (see examples below). If the last 1717 // comment begins with "Unordered output:" then the output is compared to the 1718 // comment, however the order of the lines is ignored. An example with no such 1719 // comment is compiled but not executed. An example with no text after 1720 // "Output:" is compiled, executed, and expected to produce no output. 1721 // 1722 // Godoc displays the body of ExampleXXX to demonstrate the use 1723 // of the function, constant, or variable XXX. An example of a method M with 1724 // receiver type T or *T is named ExampleT_M. There may be multiple examples 1725 // for a given function, constant, or variable, distinguished by a trailing _xxx, 1726 // where xxx is a suffix not beginning with an upper case letter. 1727 // 1728 // Here is an example of an example: 1729 // 1730 // func ExamplePrintln() { 1731 // Println("The output of\nthis example.") 1732 // // Output: The output of 1733 // // this example. 1734 // } 1735 // 1736 // Here is another example where the ordering of the output is ignored: 1737 // 1738 // func ExamplePerm() { 1739 // for _, value := range Perm(4) { 1740 // fmt.Println(value) 1741 // } 1742 // 1743 // // Unordered output: 4 1744 // // 2 1745 // // 1 1746 // // 3 1747 // // 0 1748 // } 1749 // 1750 // The entire test file is presented as the example when it contains a single 1751 // example function, at least one other function, type, variable, or constant 1752 // declaration, and no test or benchmark functions. 1753 // 1754 // See the documentation of the testing package for more information. 1755 // 1756 // 1757 package main