1 # If a patch of a module requires a higher version of itself,
2 # it should be reported as its own conflict.
3 #
4 # This case is weird and unlikely to occur often at all, but it should not
5 # spuriously succeed.
6 # (It used to print v0.1.1 but then silently upgrade to v0.2.0.)
7
8 ! go get example.net/a@patch
9 stderr '^go: example.net/a@patch \(v0.1.1\) requires example.net/a@v0.2.0, not example.net/a@patch \(v0.1.1\)$' # TODO: A mention of b v0.1.0 would be nice.
10
11 -- go.mod --
12 module example
13
14 go 1.16
15
16 require example.net/a v0.1.0
17
18 replace (
19 example.net/a v0.1.0 => ./a10
20 example.net/a v0.1.1 => ./a11
21 example.net/a v0.2.0 => ./a20
22 example.net/b v0.1.0 => ./b10
23 )
24 -- example.go --
25 package example
26
27 import _ "example.net/a"
28
29 -- a10/go.mod --
30 module example.net/a
31
32 go 1.16
33 -- a10/a.go --
34 package a
35
36 -- a11/go.mod --
37 module example.net/a
38
39 go 1.16
40
41 require example.net/b v0.1.0
42 -- a11/a.go --
43 package a
44
45 import _ "example.net/b"
46
47 -- a20/go.mod --
48 module example.net/a
49
50 go 1.16
51 -- a20/a.go --
52 package a
53
54
55 -- b10/go.mod --
56 module example.net/b
57
58 go 1.16
59
60 require example.net/a v0.2.0
61 -- b10/b.go --
62 package b
63
64 import _ "example.net/a"
65
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