10 Go 1.10 Release Notes
Go 1.10 Release Notes
Introduction to Go 1.10
The latest Go release, version 1.10, arrives six months after Go 1.9. Most of its changes are in the implementation of the toolchain, runtime, and libraries. As always, the release maintains the Go 1 promise of compatibility. We expect almost all Go programs to continue to compile and run as before.
This release improves caching of built packages, adds caching of successful test results, runs vet automatically during tests, and permits passing string values directly between Go and C using cgo. A new compiler option whitelist may cause unexpected invalid flag
errors in code that built successfully with older releases.
Changes to the language
There are no significant changes to the language specification.
A corner case involving shifts of untyped constants has been clarified, and as a result the compilers have been updated to allow the index expression x[1.0
<<
s]
where s
is an unsigned integer; the go/types package already did.
The grammar for method expressions has been updated to relax the syntax to allow any type expression as a receiver; this matches what the compilers were already implementing. For example, struct{io.Reader}.Read
is a valid, if unusual, method expression that the compilers already accepted and is now permitted by the language grammar.
Ports
There are no new supported operating systems or processor architectures in this release. Most of the work has focused on strengthening the support for existing ports, in particular new instructions in the assembler and improvements to the code generated by the compilers.
As announced in the Go 1.9 release notes, Go 1.10 now requires FreeBSD 10.3 or later; support for FreeBSD 9.3 has been removed.
Go now runs on NetBSD again but requires the unreleased NetBSD 8. Only GOARCH
amd64
and 386
have been fixed. The arm
port is still broken.
On 32-bit MIPS systems, the new environment variable settings GOMIPS=hardfloat
(the default) andGOMIPS=softfloat
select whether to use hardware instructions or software emulation for floating-point computations.
Go 1.10 is the last release that will run on OpenBSD 6.0. Go 1.11 will require OpenBSD 6.2.
Go 1.10 is the last release that will run on OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion or OS X 10.9 Mavericks. Go 1.11 will require OS X 10.10 Yosemite or later.
Go 1.10 is the last release that will run on Windows XP or Windows Vista. Go 1.11 will require Windows 7 or later.
Tools
Default GOROOT & GOTMPDIR
If the environment variable $GOROOT
is unset, the go tool previously used the default GOROOT
set during toolchain compilation. Now, before falling back to that default, the go tool attempts to deduce GOROOT
from its own executable path. This allows binary distributions to be unpacked anywhere in the file system and then be used without setting GOROOT
explicitly.
By default, the go tool creates its temporary files and directories in the system temporary directory (for example, $TMPDIR
on Unix). If the new environment variable $GOTMPDIR
is set, the go tool will creates its temporary files and directories in that directory instead.
Build & Install
The go
build
command now detects out-of-date packages purely based on the content of source files, specified build flags, and metadata stored in the compiled packages. Modification times are no longer consulted or relevant. The old advice to add -a
to force a rebuild in cases where the modification times were misleading for one reason or another (for example, changes in build flags) is no longer necessary: builds now always detect when packages must be rebuilt. (If you observe otherwise, please file a bug.)
The go
build
-asmflags
, -gcflags
, -gccgoflags
, and -ldflags
options now apply by default only to the packages listed directly on the command line. For example, go
build
-gcflags=-m
mypkg
passes the compiler the -m
flag when building mypkg
but not its dependencies. The new, more general form -asmflags=pattern=flags
(and similarly for the others) applies the flags
only to the packages matching the pattern. For example: go
install
-ldflags=cmd/gofmt=-X=main.version=1.2.3
cmd/...
installs all the commands matching cmd/...
but only applies the -X
option to the linker flags for cmd/gofmt
. For more details, see go
help
build
.
The go
build
command now maintains a cache of recently built packages, separate from the installed packages in $GOROOT/pkg
or $GOPATH/pkg
. The effect of the cache should be to speed builds that do not explicitly install packages or when switching between different copies of source code (for example, when changing back and forth between different branches in a version control system). The old advice to add the -i
flag for speed, as in go
build
-i
or go
test
-i
, is no longer necessary: builds run just as fast without -i
. For more details, see go
help
cache
.
The go
install
command now installs only the packages and commands listed directly on the command line. For example, go
install
cmd/gofmt
installs the gofmt program but not any of the packages on which it depends. The new build cache makes future commands still run as quickly as if the dependencies had been installed. To force the installation of dependencies, use the new go
install
-i
flag. Installing dependency packages should not be necessary in general, and the very concept of installed packages may disappear in a future release.
Many details of the go
build
implementation have changed to support these improvements. One new requirement implied by these changes is that binary-only packages must now declare accurate import blocks in their stub source code, so that those imports can be made available when linking a program using the binary-only package. For more details, see go
help
filetype
.
Test
The go
test
command now caches test results: if the test executable and command line match a previous run and the files and environment variables consulted by that run have not changed either, go
test
will print the previous test output, replacing the elapsed time with the string “(cached).” Test caching applies only to successful test results; only to go
test
commands with an explicit list of packages; and only to command lines using a subset of the -cpu
, -list
, -parallel
, -run
, -short
, and -v
test flags. The idiomatic way to bypass test caching is to use -count=1
.
The go
test
command now automatically runs go
vet
on the package being tested, to identify significant problems before running the test. Any such problems are treated like build errors and prevent execution of the test. Only a high-confidence subset of the available go
vet
checks are enabled for this automatic check. To disable the running of go
vet
, use go
test
-vet=off
.
The go
test
-coverpkg
flag now interprets its argument as a comma-separated list of patterns to match against the dependencies of each test, not as a list of packages to load anew. For example, go
test
-coverpkg=all
is now a meaningful way to run a test with coverage enabled for the test package and all its dependencies. Also, the go
test
-coverprofile
option is now supported when running multiple tests.
In case of failure due to timeout, tests are now more likely to write their profiles before exiting.
The go
test
command now always merges the standard output and standard error from a given test binary execution and writes both to go
test
's standard output. In past releases, go
test
only applied this merging most of the time.
The go
test
-v
output now includes PAUSE
and CONT
status update lines to mark when parallel tests pause and continue.
The new go
test
-failfast
flag disables running additional tests after any test fails. Note that tests running in parallel with the failing test are allowed to complete.
Finally, the new go
test
-json
flag filters test output through the new command go
tool
test2json
to produce a machine-readable JSON-formatted description of test execution. This allows the creation of rich presentations of test execution in IDEs and other tools.
For more details about all these changes, see go
help
test
and the test2json documentation.
Cgo
Options specified by cgo using #cgo CFLAGS
and the like are now checked against a whitelist of permitted options. This closes a security hole in which a downloaded package uses compiler options like -fplugin
to run arbitrary code on the machine where it is being built. This can cause a build error such as invalid flag in #cgo CFLAGS
. For more background, and how to handle this error, see https://golang.org/s/invalidflag.
Cgo now implements a C typedef like “typedef
X
Y
” using a Go type alias, so that Go code may use the types C.X
and C.Y
interchangeably. It also now supports the use of niladic function-like macros. Also, the documentation has been updated to clarify that Go structs and Go arrays are not supported in the type signatures of cgo-exported functions.
Cgo now supports direct access to Go string values from C. Functions in the C preamble may use the type _GoString_
to accept a Go string as an argument. C code may call _GoStringLen
and _GoStringPtr
for direct access to the contents of the string. A value of type _GoString_
may be passed in a call to an exported Go function that takes an argument of Go type string
.
During toolchain bootstrap, the environment variables CC
and CC_FOR_TARGET
specify the default C compiler that the resulting toolchain will use for host and target builds, respectively. However, if the toolchain will be used with multiple targets, it may be necessary to specify a different C compiler for each (for example, a different compiler for darwin/arm64
versus linux/ppc64le
). The new set of environment variables CC_FOR_goos_goarch
allows specifying a different default C compiler for each target. Note that these variables only apply during toolchain bootstrap, to set the defaults used by the resulting toolchain. Later go
build
commands use the CC
environment variable or else the built-in default.
Cgo now translates some C types that would normally map to a pointer type in Go, to a uintptr
instead. These types include the CFTypeRef
hierarchy in Darwin's CoreFoundation framework and the jobject
hierarchy in Java's JNI interface.
These types must be uintptr
on the Go side because they would otherwise confuse the Go garbage collector; they are sometimes not really pointers but data structures encoded in a pointer-sized integer. Pointers to Go memory must not be stored in these uintptr
values.
Because of this change, values of the affected types need to be zero-initialized with the constant 0
instead of the constant nil
. Go 1.10 provides gofix
modules to help with that rewrite:
go tool fix -r cftype <pkg> go tool fix -r jni <pkg>
For more details, see the cgo documentation.
Doc
The go
doc
tool now adds functions returning slices of T
or *T
to the display of type T
, similar to the existing behavior for functions returning single T
or *T
results. For example:
$ go doc mail.Address package mail // import "net/mail" type Address struct { Name string Address string } Address represents a single mail address. func ParseAddress(address string) (*Address, error) func ParseAddressList(list string) ([]*Address, error) func (a *Address) String() string $
Previously, ParseAddressList
was only shown in the package overview (go
doc
mail
).
Fix
The go
fix
tool now replaces imports of "golang.org/x/net/context"
with "context"
. (Forwarding aliases in the former make it completely equivalent to the latter when using Go 1.9 or later.)
Get
The go
get
command now supports Fossil source code repositories.
Pprof
The blocking and mutex profiles produced by the runtime/pprof
package now include symbol information, so they can be viewed in go
tool
pprof
without the binary that produced the profile. (All other profile types were changed to include symbol information in Go 1.9.)
The go
tool
pprof
profile visualizer has been updated to git version 9e20b5b (2017-11-08) from github.com/google/pprof, which includes an updated web interface.
Vet
The go
vet
command now always has access to complete, up-to-date type information when checking packages, even for packages using cgo or vendored imports. The reports should be more accurate as a result. Note that only go
vet
has access to this information; the more low-level go
tool
vet
does not and should be avoided except when working on vet
itself. (As of Go 1.9, go
vet
provides access to all the same flags as go
tool
vet
.)
Diagnostics
This release includes a new overview of available Go program diagnostic tools.
Gofmt
Two minor details of the default formatting of Go source code have changed. First, certain complex three-index slice expressions previously formatted like x[i+1
:
j:k]
and now format with more consistent spacing: x[i+1
:
j
:
k]
. Second, single-method interface literals written on a single line, which are sometimes used in type assertions, are no longer split onto multiple lines.
Note that these kinds of minor updates to gofmt are expected from time to time. In general, we recommend against building systems that check that source code matches the output of a specific version of gofmt. For example, a continuous integration test that fails if any code already checked into a repository is not “properly formatted” is inherently fragile and not recommended.
If multiple programs must agree about which version of gofmt is used to format a source file, we recommend that they do this by arranging to invoke the same gofmt binary. For example, in the Go open source repository, our Git pre-commit hook is written in Go and could import go/format
directly, but instead it invokes the gofmt
binary found in the current path, so that the pre-commit hook need not be recompiled each time gofmt
changes.
Compiler Toolchain
The compiler includes many improvements to the performance of generated code, spread fairly evenly across the supported architectures.
The DWARF debug information recorded in binaries has been improved in a few ways: constant values are now recorded; line number information is more accurate, making source-level stepping through a program work better; and each package is now presented as its own DWARF compilation unit.
The various build modes have been ported to more systems. Specifically, c-shared
now works on linux/ppc64le
, windows/386
, and windows/amd64
; pie
now works on darwin/amd64
and also forces the use of external linking on all systems; and plugin
now works on linux/ppc64le
and darwin/amd64
.
The linux/ppc64le
port now requires the use of external linking with any programs that use cgo, even uses by the standard library.
Assembler
For the ARM 32-bit port, the assembler now supports the instructions BFC
, BFI
, BFX
, BFXU
, FMULAD
, FMULAF
, FMULSD
,FMULSF
, FNMULAD
, FNMULAF
, FNMULSD
, FNMULSF
, MULAD
, MULAF
, MULSD
, MULSF
, NMULAD
, NMULAF
, NMULD
, NMULF
, NMULSD
, NMULSF
,XTAB
, XTABU
, XTAH
, and XTAHU
.
For the ARM 64-bit port, the assembler now supports the VADD
, VADDP
, VADDV
, VAND
, VCMEQ
, VDUP
, VEOR
, VLD1
, VMOV
,VMOVI
, VMOVS
, VORR
, VREV32
, and VST1
instructions.
For the PowerPC 64-bit port, the assembler now supports the POWER9 instructions ADDEX
, CMPEQB
, COPY
, DARN
,LDMX
, MADDHD
, MADDHDU
, MADDLD
, MFVSRLD
, MTVSRDD
, MTVSRWS
, PASTECC
, VCMPNEZB
, VCMPNEZBCC
, and VMSUMUDM
.
For the S390X port, the assembler now supports the TMHH
, TMHL
, TMLH
, and TMLL
instructions.
For the X86 64-bit port, the assembler now supports 359 new instructions, including the full AVX, AVX2, BMI, BMI2, F16C, FMA3, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, and SSE4.2 extension sets. The assembler also no longer implements MOVL
$0,
AX
as an XORL
instruction, to avoid clearing the condition flags unexpectedly.
Gccgo
Due to the alignment of Go's semiannual release schedule with GCC's annual release schedule, GCC release 7 contains the Go 1.8.3 version of gccgo. We expect that the next release, GCC 8, will contain the Go 1.10 version of gccgo.
Runtime
The behavior of nested calls to LockOSThread
and UnlockOSThread
has changed. These functions control whether a goroutine is locked to a specific operating system thread, so that the goroutine only runs on that thread, and the thread only runs that goroutine. Previously, calling LockOSThread
more than once in a row was equivalent to calling it once, and a single UnlockOSThread
always unlocked the thread. Now, the calls nest: if LockOSThread
is called multiple times, UnlockOSThread
must be called the same number of times in order to unlock the thread. Existing code that was careful not to nest these calls will remain correct. Existing code that incorrectly assumed the calls nested will become correct. Most uses of these functions in public Go source code falls into the second category.
Because one common use of LockOSThread
and UnlockOSThread
is to allow Go code to reliably modify thread-local state (for example, Linux or Plan 9 name spaces), the runtime now treats locked threads as unsuitable for reuse or for creating new threads.
Stack traces no longer include implicit wrapper functions (previously marked <autogenerated>
), unless a fault or panic happens in the wrapper itself. As a result, skip counts passed to functions like Caller
should now always match the structure of the code as written, rather than depending on optimization decisions and implementation details.
The garbage collector has been modified to reduce its impact on allocation latency. It now uses a smaller fraction of the overall CPU when running, but it may run more of the time. The total CPU consumed by the garbage collector has not changed significantly.
The GOROOT
function now defaults (when the $GOROOT
environment variable is not set) to the GOROOT
or GOROOT_FINAL
in effect at the time the calling program was compiled. Previously it used the GOROOT
or GOROOT_FINAL
in effect at the time the toolchain that compiled the calling program was compiled.
There is no longer a limit on the GOMAXPROCS
setting. (In Go 1.9 the limit was 1024.)
Performance
As always, the changes are so general and varied that precise statements about performance are difficult to make. Most programs should run a bit faster, due to speedups in the garbage collector, better generated code, and optimizations in the core library.
Garbage Collector
Many applications should experience significantly lower allocation latency and overall performance overhead when the garbage collector is active.
Core library
All of the changes to the standard library are minor. The changes in bytes and net/url are the most likely to require updating of existing programs.
Minor changes to the library
As always, there are various minor changes and updates to the library, made with the Go 1 promise of compatibility in mind.
- archive/tar
-
In general, the handling of special header formats is significantly improved and expanded.
FileInfoHeader
has always recorded the Unix UID and GID numbers from itsos.FileInfo
argument (specifically, from the system-dependent information returned by theFileInfo
'sSys
method) in the returnedHeader
. Now it also records the user and group names corresponding to those IDs, as well as the major and minor device numbers for device files.The new
Header.Format
field of typeFormat
controls which tar header format theWriter
uses. The default, as before, is to select the most widely-supported header type that can encode the fields needed by the header (USTAR if possible, or else PAX if possible, or else GNU). TheReader
setsHeader.Format
for each header it reads.Reader
and theWriter
now support arbitrary PAX records, using the newHeader.PAXRecords
field, a generalization of the existingXattrs
field.The
Reader
no longer insists that the file name or link name in GNU headers be valid UTF-8.When writing PAX- or GNU-format headers, the
Writer
now includes theHeader.AccessTime
andHeader.ChangeTime
fields (if set). When writing PAX-format headers, the times include sub-second precision.
- archive/zip
-
Go 1.10 adds more complete support for times and character set encodings in ZIP archives.
The original ZIP format used the standard MS-DOS encoding of year, month, day, hour, minute, and second into fields in two 16-bit values. That encoding cannot represent time zones or odd seconds, so multiple extensions have been introduced to allow richer encodings. In Go 1.10, the
Reader
andWriter
now support the widely-understood Info-Zip extension that encodes the time separately in the 32-bit Unix “seconds since epoch” form. TheFileHeader
's newModified
field of typetime.Time
obsoletes theModifiedTime
andModifiedDate
fields, which continue to hold the MS-DOS encoding. TheReader
andWriter
now adopt the common convention that a ZIP archive storing a time zone-independent Unix time also stores the local time in the MS-DOS field, so that the time zone offset can be inferred. For compatibility, theModTime
andSetModTime
methods behave the same as in earlier releases; new code should useModified
directly.The header for each file in a ZIP archive has a flag bit indicating whether the name and comment fields are encoded as UTF-8, as opposed to a system-specific default encoding. In Go 1.8 and earlier, the
Writer
never set the UTF-8 bit. In Go 1.9, theWriter
changed to set the UTF-8 bit almost always. This broke the creation of ZIP archives containing Shift-JIS file names. In Go 1.10, theWriter
now sets the UTF-8 bit only when both the name and the comment field are valid UTF-8 and at least one is non-ASCII. Because non-ASCII encodings very rarely look like valid UTF-8, the new heuristic should be correct nearly all the time. Setting aFileHeader
's newNonUTF8
field to true disables the heuristic entirely for that file.The
Writer
also now supports setting the end-of-central-directory record's comment field, by calling theWriter
's newSetComment
method.
- bufio
-
The new
Reader.Size
andWriter.Size
methods report theReader
orWriter
's underlying buffer size.
- bytes
-
The
Fields
,FieldsFunc
,Split
, andSplitAfter
functions have always returned subslices of their inputs. Go 1.10 changes each returned subslice to have capacity equal to its length, so that appending to one cannot overwrite adjacent data in the original input.
- crypto/cipher
-
NewOFB
now panics if given an initialization vector of incorrect length, like the other constructors in the package always have. (Previously it returned a nilStream
implementation.)
- crypto/tls
-
The TLS server now advertises support for SHA-512 signatures when using TLS 1.2. The server already supported the signatures, but some clients would not select them unless explicitly advertised.
- crypto/x509
-
Certificate.Verify
now enforces the name constraints for all names contained in the certificate, not just the one name that a client has asked about. Extended key usage restrictions are similarly now checked all at once. As a result, after a certificate has been validated, now it can be trusted in its entirety. It is no longer necessary to revalidate the certificate for each additional name or key usage.Parsed certificates also now report URI names and IP, email, and URI constraints, using the new
Certificate
fieldsURIs
,PermittedIPRanges
,ExcludedIPRanges
,PermittedEmailAddresses
,ExcludedEmailAddresses
,PermittedURIDomains
, andExcludedURIDomains
. Certificates with invalid values for those fields are now rejected.The new
MarshalPKCS1PublicKey
andParsePKCS1PublicKey
functions convert an RSA public key to and from PKCS#1-encoded form.The new
MarshalPKCS8PrivateKey
function converts a private key to PKCS#8-encoded form. (ParsePKCS8PrivateKey
has existed since Go 1.)
- crypto/x509/pkix
-
Name
now implements aString
method that formats the X.509 distinguished name in the standard RFC 2253 format.
- database/sql/driver
-
Drivers that currently hold on to the destination buffer provided by
driver.Rows.Next
should ensure they no longer write to a buffer assigned to the destination array outside of that call. Drivers must be careful that underlying buffers are not modified when closingdriver.Rows
.Drivers that want to construct a
sql.DB
for their clients can now implement theConnector
interface and call the newsql.OpenDB
function, instead of needing to encode all configuration into a string passed tosql.Open
.Drivers that want to parse the configuration string only once per
sql.DB
instead of once persql.Conn
, or that want access to eachsql.Conn
's underlying context, can make theirDriver
implementations also implementDriverContext
's newOpenConnector
method.Drivers that implement
ExecerContext
no longer need to implementExecer
; similarly, drivers that implementQueryerContext
no longer need to implementQueryer
. Previously, even if the context-based interfaces were implemented they were ignored unless the non-context-based interfaces were also implemented.To allow drivers to better isolate different clients using a cached driver connection in succession, if a
Conn
implements the newSessionResetter
interface,database/sql
will now callResetSession
before reusing theConn
for a new client.
- debug/elf
-
This release adds 348 new relocation constants divided between the relocation types
R_386
,R_AARCH64
,R_ARM
,R_PPC64
, andR_X86_64
.
- debug/macho
-
Go 1.10 adds support for reading relocations from Mach-O sections, using the
Section
struct's newRelocs
field and the newReloc
,RelocTypeARM
,RelocTypeARM64
,RelocTypeGeneric
, andRelocTypeX86_64
types and associated constants.Go 1.10 also adds support for the
LC_RPATH
load command, represented by the typesRpathCmd
andRpath
, and new named constants for the various flag bits found in headers.
- encoding/asn1
-
Marshal
now correctly encodes strings containing asterisks as type UTF8String instead of PrintableString, unless the string is in a struct field with a tag forcing the use of PrintableString.Marshal
also now respects struct tags containingapplication
directives.The new
MarshalWithParams
function marshals its argument as if the additional params were its associated struct field tag.Unmarshal
now respects struct field tags using theexplicit
andtag
directives.Both
Marshal
andUnmarshal
now support a new struct field tagnumeric
, indicating an ASN.1 NumericString.
- encoding/csv
-
Reader
now disallows the use of nonsensicalComma
andComment
settings, such as NUL, carriage return, newline, invalid runes, and the Unicode replacement character, or settingComma
andComment
equal to each other.In the case of a syntax error in a CSV record that spans multiple input lines,
Reader
now reports the line on which the record started in theParseError
's newStartLine
field.
- encoding/hex
-
The new functions
NewEncoder
andNewDecoder
provide streaming conversions to and from hexadecimal, analogous to equivalent functions already in encoding/base32 and encoding/base64.When the functions
Decode
andDecodeString
encounter malformed input, they now return the number of bytes already converted along with the error. Previously they always returned a count of 0 with any error.
- encoding/json
-
The
Decoder
adds a new methodDisallowUnknownFields
that causes it to report inputs with unknown JSON fields as a decoding error. (The default behavior has always been to discard unknown fields.)As a result of fixing a reflect bug,
Unmarshal
can no longer decode into fields inside embedded pointers to unexported struct types, because it cannot initialize the unexported embedded pointer to point at fresh storage.Unmarshal
now returns an error in this case.
- encoding/pem
-
Encode
andEncodeToMemory
no longer generate partial output when presented with a block that is impossible to encode as PEM data.
- encoding/xml
-
The new function
NewTokenDecoder
is likeNewDecoder
but creates a decoder reading from aTokenReader
instead of an XML-formatted byte stream. This is meant to enable the construction of XML stream transformers in client libraries.
- flag
-
The default
Usage
function now prints its first line of output toCommandLine.Output()
instead of assumingos.Stderr
, so that the usage message is properly redirected for clients usingCommandLine.SetOutput
.PrintDefaults
now adds appropriate indentation after newlines in flag usage strings, so that multi-line usage strings display nicely.FlagSet
adds new methodsErrorHandling
,Name
, andOutput
, to retrieve the settings passed toNewFlagSet
andFlagSet.SetOutput
.
- go/doc
-
To support the doc change described above, functions returning slices of
T
,*T
,**T
, and so on are now reported inT
'sType
'sFuncs
list, instead of in thePackage
'sFuncs
list.
- go/importer
-
The
For
function now accepts a non-nil lookup argument.
- go/printer
-
The changes to the default formatting of Go source code discussed in the gofmt section above are implemented in the go/printerpackage and also affect the output of the higher-level go/format package.
- hash
-
Implementations of the
Hash
interface are now encouraged to implementencoding.BinaryMarshaler
andencoding.BinaryUnmarshaler
to allow saving and recreating their internal state, and all implementations in the standard library (hash/crc32, crypto/sha256, and so on) now implement those interfaces.
- html/template
-
The new
Srcset
content type allows for proper handling of values within thesrcset
attribute ofimg
tags.
- math/big
-
Int
now supports conversions to and from bases 2 through 62 in itsSetString
andText
methods. (Previously it only allowed bases 2 through 36.) The value of the constantMaxBase
has been updated.Int
adds a newCmpAbs
method that is likeCmp
but compares only the absolute values (not the signs) of its arguments.
- math/cmplx
-
Branch cuts and other boundary cases in
Asin
,Asinh
,Atan
, andSqrt
have been corrected to match the definitions used in the C99 standard.
- math/rand
-
The new
Shuffle
function and correspondingRand.Shuffle
method shuffle an input sequence.
- math
-
The new functions
Round
andRoundToEven
round their arguments to the nearest floating-point integer;Round
rounds a half-integer to its larger integer neighbor (away from zero) whileRoundToEven
rounds a half-integer to its even integer neighbor.The new functions
Erfinv
andErfcinv
compute the inverse error function and the inverse complementary error function.
- mime/multipart
-
Reader
now accepts parts with empty filename attributes.
- mime
-
ParseMediaType
now discards invalid attribute values; previously it returned those values as empty strings.
- net
-
The
Conn
andListener
implementations in this package now guarantee that whenClose
returns, the underlying file descriptor has been closed. (In earlier releases, if theClose
stopped pending I/O in other goroutines, the closing of the file descriptor could happen in one of those goroutines shortly afterClose
returned.)TCPListener
andUnixListener
now implementsyscall.Conn
, to allow setting options on the underlying file descriptor usingsyscall.RawConn.Control
.The
Conn
implementations returned byPipe
now support setting read and write deadlines.The
IPConn.ReadMsgIP
,IPConn.WriteMsgIP
,UDPConn.ReadMsgUDP
, andUDPConn.WriteMsgUDP
, methods are now implemented on Windows.
- net/http
-
On the client side, an HTTP proxy (most commonly configured by
ProxyFromEnvironment
) can now be specified as anhttps://
URL, meaning that the client connects to the proxy over HTTPS before issuing a standard, proxied HTTP request. (Previously, HTTP proxy URLs were required to begin withhttp://
orsocks5://
.)On the server side,
FileServer
and its single-file equivalentServeFile
now applyIf-Range
checks toHEAD
requests.FileServer
also now reports directory read failures to theServer
'sErrorLog
. The content-serving handlers also now omit theContent-Type
header when serving zero-length content.ResponseWriter
'sWriteHeader
method now panics if passed an invalid (non-3-digit) status code.The
Server
will no longer add an implicit Content-Type when aHandler
does not write any output.Redirect
now sets theContent-Type
header before writing its HTTP response.
- net/mail
-
ParseAddress
andParseAddressList
now support a variety of obsolete address formats.
- net/smtp
-
The
Client
adds a newNoop
method, to test whether the server is still responding. It also now defends against possible SMTP injection in the inputs to theHello
andVerify
methods.
- net/textproto
-
ReadMIMEHeader
now rejects any header that begins with a continuation (indented) header line. Previously a header with an indented first line was treated as if the first line were not indented.
- net/url
-
ResolveReference
now preserves multiple leading slashes in the target URL. Previously it rewrote multiple leading slashes to a single slash, which resulted in thehttp.Client
following certain redirects incorrectly.For example, this code's output has changed:
base, _ := url.Parse("http://host//path//to/page1") target, _ := url.Parse("page2") fmt.Println(base.ResolveReference(target))
Note the doubled slashes around
path
. In Go 1.9 and earlier, the resolved URL washttp://host/path//to/page2
: the doubled slash beforepath
was incorrectly rewritten to a single slash, while the doubled slash afterpath
was correctly preserved. Go 1.10 preserves both doubled slashes, resolving tohttp://host//path//to/page2
as required by RFC 3986.This change may break existing buggy programs that unintentionally construct a base URL with a leading doubled slash in the path and inadvertently depend on
ResolveReference
to correct that mistake. For example, this can happen if code adds a host prefix likehttp://host/
to a path like/my/api
, resulting in a URL with a doubled slash:http://host//my/api
.UserInfo
's methods now treat a nil receiver as equivalent to a pointer to a zeroUserInfo
. Previously, they panicked.
- os
-
File
adds new methodsSetDeadline
,SetReadDeadline
, andSetWriteDeadline
that allow setting I/O deadlines when the underlying file descriptor supports non-blocking I/O operations. The definition of these methods matches those innet.Conn
. If an I/O method fails due to missing a deadline, it will return a timeout error; the newIsTimeout
function reports whether an error represents a timeout.Also matching
net.Conn
,File
'sClose
method now guarantee that whenClose
returns, the underlying file descriptor has been closed. (In earlier releases, if theClose
stopped pending I/O in other goroutines, the closing of the file descriptor could happen in one of those goroutines shortly afterClose
returned.)On BSD, macOS, and Solaris systems,
Chtimes
now supports setting file times with nanosecond precision (assuming the underlying file system can represent them).
- reflect
-
The
Copy
function now allows copying from a string into a byte array or byte slice, to match the built-in copy function.In structs, embedded pointers to unexported struct types were previously incorrectly reported with an empty
PkgPath
in the corresponding StructField, with the result that for those fields, andValue.CanSet
incorrectly returned true andValue.Set
incorrectly succeeded. The underlying metadata has been corrected; for those fields,CanSet
now correctly returns false andSet
now correctly panics. This may affect reflection-based unmarshalers that could previously unmarshal into such fields but no longer can. For example, see theencoding/json
notes.
- runtime/pprof
-
As noted above, the blocking and mutex profiles now include symbol information so that they can be viewed without needing the binary that generated them.
- strconv
-
ParseUint
now returns the maximum magnitude integer of the appropriate size with anyErrRange
error, as it was already documented to do. Previously it returned 0 withErrRange
errors.
- strings
-
A new type
Builder
is a replacement forbytes.Buffer
for the use case of accumulating text into astring
result. TheBuilder
's API is a restricted subset ofbytes.Buffer
's that allows it to safely avoid making a duplicate copy of the data during theString
method.
- syscall
-
On Windows, the new
SysProcAttr
fieldToken
, of typeToken
allows the creation of a process that runs as another user duringStartProcess
(and therefore also duringos.StartProcess
andexec.Cmd.Start
). The new functionCreateProcessAsUser
gives access to the underlying system call.On BSD, macOS, and Solaris systems,
UtimesNano
is now implemented.
- time
-
LoadLocation
now uses the directory or uncompressed zip file named by the$ZONEINFO
environment variable before looking in the default system-specific list of known installation locations or in$GOROOT/lib/time/zoneinfo.zip
.The new function
LoadLocationFromTZData
allows conversion of IANA time zone file data to aLocation
.
- unicode
-
The
unicode
package and associated support throughout the system has been upgraded from Unicode 9.0 to Unicode 10.0, which adds 8,518 new characters, including four new scripts, one new property, a Bitcoin currency symbol, and 56 new emoji. -