github.com/powerman/golang-tools@v0.1.11-0.20220410185822-5ad214d8d803/go/packages/doc.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2018 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 /* 6 Package packages loads Go packages for inspection and analysis. 7 8 The Load function takes as input a list of patterns and return a list of Package 9 structs describing individual packages matched by those patterns. 10 The LoadMode controls the amount of detail in the loaded packages. 11 12 Load passes most patterns directly to the underlying build tool, 13 but all patterns with the prefix "query=", where query is a 14 non-empty string of letters from [a-z], are reserved and may be 15 interpreted as query operators. 16 17 Two query operators are currently supported: "file" and "pattern". 18 19 The query "file=path/to/file.go" matches the package or packages enclosing 20 the Go source file path/to/file.go. For example "file=~/go/src/fmt/print.go" 21 might return the packages "fmt" and "fmt [fmt.test]". 22 23 The query "pattern=string" causes "string" to be passed directly to 24 the underlying build tool. In most cases this is unnecessary, 25 but an application can use Load("pattern=" + x) as an escaping mechanism 26 to ensure that x is not interpreted as a query operator if it contains '='. 27 28 All other query operators are reserved for future use and currently 29 cause Load to report an error. 30 31 The Package struct provides basic information about the package, including 32 33 - ID, a unique identifier for the package in the returned set; 34 - GoFiles, the names of the package's Go source files; 35 - Imports, a map from source import strings to the Packages they name; 36 - Types, the type information for the package's exported symbols; 37 - Syntax, the parsed syntax trees for the package's source code; and 38 - TypeInfo, the result of a complete type-check of the package syntax trees. 39 40 (See the documentation for type Package for the complete list of fields 41 and more detailed descriptions.) 42 43 For example, 44 45 Load(nil, "bytes", "unicode...") 46 47 returns four Package structs describing the standard library packages 48 bytes, unicode, unicode/utf16, and unicode/utf8. Note that one pattern 49 can match multiple packages and that a package might be matched by 50 multiple patterns: in general it is not possible to determine which 51 packages correspond to which patterns. 52 53 Note that the list returned by Load contains only the packages matched 54 by the patterns. Their dependencies can be found by walking the import 55 graph using the Imports fields. 56 57 The Load function can be configured by passing a pointer to a Config as 58 the first argument. A nil Config is equivalent to the zero Config, which 59 causes Load to run in LoadFiles mode, collecting minimal information. 60 See the documentation for type Config for details. 61 62 As noted earlier, the Config.Mode controls the amount of detail 63 reported about the loaded packages. See the documentation for type LoadMode 64 for details. 65 66 Most tools should pass their command-line arguments (after any flags) 67 uninterpreted to the loader, so that the loader can interpret them 68 according to the conventions of the underlying build system. 69 See the Example function for typical usage. 70 71 */ 72 package packages // import "github.com/powerman/golang-tools/go/packages" 73 74 /* 75 76 Motivation and design considerations 77 78 The new package's design solves problems addressed by two existing 79 packages: go/build, which locates and describes packages, and 80 github.com/powerman/golang-tools/go/loader, which loads, parses and type-checks them. 81 The go/build.Package structure encodes too much of the 'go build' way 82 of organizing projects, leaving us in need of a data type that describes a 83 package of Go source code independent of the underlying build system. 84 We wanted something that works equally well with go build and vgo, and 85 also other build systems such as Bazel and Blaze, making it possible to 86 construct analysis tools that work in all these environments. 87 Tools such as errcheck and staticcheck were essentially unavailable to 88 the Go community at Google, and some of Google's internal tools for Go 89 are unavailable externally. 90 This new package provides a uniform way to obtain package metadata by 91 querying each of these build systems, optionally supporting their 92 preferred command-line notations for packages, so that tools integrate 93 neatly with users' build environments. The Metadata query function 94 executes an external query tool appropriate to the current workspace. 95 96 Loading packages always returns the complete import graph "all the way down", 97 even if all you want is information about a single package, because the query 98 mechanisms of all the build systems we currently support ({go,vgo} list, and 99 blaze/bazel aspect-based query) cannot provide detailed information 100 about one package without visiting all its dependencies too, so there is 101 no additional asymptotic cost to providing transitive information. 102 (This property might not be true of a hypothetical 5th build system.) 103 104 In calls to TypeCheck, all initial packages, and any package that 105 transitively depends on one of them, must be loaded from source. 106 Consider A->B->C->D->E: if A,C are initial, A,B,C must be loaded from 107 source; D may be loaded from export data, and E may not be loaded at all 108 (though it's possible that D's export data mentions it, so a 109 types.Package may be created for it and exposed.) 110 111 The old loader had a feature to suppress type-checking of function 112 bodies on a per-package basis, primarily intended to reduce the work of 113 obtaining type information for imported packages. Now that imports are 114 satisfied by export data, the optimization no longer seems necessary. 115 116 Despite some early attempts, the old loader did not exploit export data, 117 instead always using the equivalent of WholeProgram mode. This was due 118 to the complexity of mixing source and export data packages (now 119 resolved by the upward traversal mentioned above), and because export data 120 files were nearly always missing or stale. Now that 'go build' supports 121 caching, all the underlying build systems can guarantee to produce 122 export data in a reasonable (amortized) time. 123 124 Test "main" packages synthesized by the build system are now reported as 125 first-class packages, avoiding the need for clients (such as go/ssa) to 126 reinvent this generation logic. 127 128 One way in which go/packages is simpler than the old loader is in its 129 treatment of in-package tests. In-package tests are packages that 130 consist of all the files of the library under test, plus the test files. 131 The old loader constructed in-package tests by a two-phase process of 132 mutation called "augmentation": first it would construct and type check 133 all the ordinary library packages and type-check the packages that 134 depend on them; then it would add more (test) files to the package and 135 type-check again. This two-phase approach had four major problems: 136 1) in processing the tests, the loader modified the library package, 137 leaving no way for a client application to see both the test 138 package and the library package; one would mutate into the other. 139 2) because test files can declare additional methods on types defined in 140 the library portion of the package, the dispatch of method calls in 141 the library portion was affected by the presence of the test files. 142 This should have been a clue that the packages were logically 143 different. 144 3) this model of "augmentation" assumed at most one in-package test 145 per library package, which is true of projects using 'go build', 146 but not other build systems. 147 4) because of the two-phase nature of test processing, all packages that 148 import the library package had to be processed before augmentation, 149 forcing a "one-shot" API and preventing the client from calling Load 150 in several times in sequence as is now possible in WholeProgram mode. 151 (TypeCheck mode has a similar one-shot restriction for a different reason.) 152 153 Early drafts of this package supported "multi-shot" operation. 154 Although it allowed clients to make a sequence of calls (or concurrent 155 calls) to Load, building up the graph of Packages incrementally, 156 it was of marginal value: it complicated the API 157 (since it allowed some options to vary across calls but not others), 158 it complicated the implementation, 159 it cannot be made to work in Types mode, as explained above, 160 and it was less efficient than making one combined call (when this is possible). 161 Among the clients we have inspected, none made multiple calls to load 162 but could not be easily and satisfactorily modified to make only a single call. 163 However, applications changes may be required. 164 For example, the ssadump command loads the user-specified packages 165 and in addition the runtime package. It is tempting to simply append 166 "runtime" to the user-provided list, but that does not work if the user 167 specified an ad-hoc package such as [a.go b.go]. 168 Instead, ssadump no longer requests the runtime package, 169 but seeks it among the dependencies of the user-specified packages, 170 and emits an error if it is not found. 171 172 Overlays: The Overlay field in the Config allows providing alternate contents 173 for Go source files, by providing a mapping from file path to contents. 174 go/packages will pull in new imports added in overlay files when go/packages 175 is run in LoadImports mode or greater. 176 Overlay support for the go list driver isn't complete yet: if the file doesn't 177 exist on disk, it will only be recognized in an overlay if it is a non-test file 178 and the package would be reported even without the overlay. 179 180 Questions & Tasks 181 182 - Add GOARCH/GOOS? 183 They are not portable concepts, but could be made portable. 184 Our goal has been to allow users to express themselves using the conventions 185 of the underlying build system: if the build system honors GOARCH 186 during a build and during a metadata query, then so should 187 applications built atop that query mechanism. 188 Conversely, if the target architecture of the build is determined by 189 command-line flags, the application can pass the relevant 190 flags through to the build system using a command such as: 191 myapp -query_flag="--cpu=amd64" -query_flag="--os=darwin" 192 However, this approach is low-level, unwieldy, and non-portable. 193 GOOS and GOARCH seem important enough to warrant a dedicated option. 194 195 - How should we handle partial failures such as a mixture of good and 196 malformed patterns, existing and non-existent packages, successful and 197 failed builds, import failures, import cycles, and so on, in a call to 198 Load? 199 200 - Support bazel, blaze, and go1.10 list, not just go1.11 list. 201 202 - Handle (and test) various partial success cases, e.g. 203 a mixture of good packages and: 204 invalid patterns 205 nonexistent packages 206 empty packages 207 packages with malformed package or import declarations 208 unreadable files 209 import cycles 210 other parse errors 211 type errors 212 Make sure we record errors at the correct place in the graph. 213 214 - Missing packages among initial arguments are not reported. 215 Return bogus packages for them, like golist does. 216 217 - "undeclared name" errors (for example) are reported out of source file 218 order. I suspect this is due to the breadth-first resolution now used 219 by go/types. Is that a bug? Discuss with gri. 220 221 */