// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. //go:build ignore // Build this command explicitly: go build gotype.go /* The gotype command, like the front-end of a Go compiler, parses and type-checks a single Go package. Errors are reported if the analysis fails; otherwise gotype is quiet (unless -v is set). Without a list of paths, gotype reads from standard input, which must provide a single Go source file defining a complete package. With a single directory argument, gotype checks the Go files in that directory, comprising a single package. Use -t to include the (in-package) _test.go files. Use -x to type check only external test files. Otherwise, each path must be the filename of a Go file belonging to the same package. Imports are processed by importing directly from the source of imported packages (default), or by importing from compiled and installed packages (by setting -c to the respective compiler). The -c flag must be set to a compiler ("gc", "gccgo") when type- checking packages containing imports with relative import paths (import "./mypkg") because the source importer cannot know which files to include for such packages. Usage: gotype [flags] [path...] The flags are: -t include local test files in a directory (ignored if -x is provided) -x consider only external test files in a directory -e report all errors (not just the first 10) -v verbose mode -c compiler used for installed packages (gc, gccgo, or source); default: source Flags controlling additional output: -ast print AST -trace print parse trace -comments parse comments (ignored unless -ast or -trace is provided) -panic panic on first error Examples: To check the files a.go, b.go, and c.go: gotype a.go b.go c.go To check an entire package including (in-package) tests in the directory dir and print the processed files: gotype -t -v dir To check the external test package (if any) in the current directory, based on installed packages compiled with cmd/compile: gotype -c=gc -x . To verify the output of a pipe: echo "package foo" | gotype */ package main import ( "flag" "fmt" "go/ast" "go/build" "go/importer" "go/parser" "go/scanner" "go/token" "go/types" "io" "os" "path/filepath" "sync" "time" ) var ( // main operation modes testFiles = flag.Bool("t", false, "include in-package test files in a directory") xtestFiles = flag.Bool("x", false, "consider only external test files in a directory") allErrors = flag.Bool("e", false, "report all errors, not just the first 10") verbose = flag.Bool("v", false, "verbose mode") compiler = flag.String("c", "source", "compiler used for installed packages (gc, gccgo, or source)") // additional output control printAST = flag.Bool("ast", false, "print AST") printTrace = flag.Bool("trace", false, "print parse trace") parseComments = flag.Bool("comments", false, "parse comments (ignored unless -ast or -trace is provided)") panicOnError = flag.Bool("panic", false, "panic on first error") ) var ( fset = token.NewFileSet() errorCount = 0 sequential = false parserMode parser.Mode ) func initParserMode() { if *allErrors { parserMode |= parser.AllErrors } if *printAST { sequential = true } if *printTrace { parserMode |= parser.Trace sequential = true } if *parseComments && (*printAST || *printTrace) { parserMode |= parser.ParseComments } } const usageString = `usage: gotype [flags] [path ...] The gotype command, like the front-end of a Go compiler, parses and type-checks a single Go package. Errors are reported if the analysis fails; otherwise gotype is quiet (unless -v is set). Without a list of paths, gotype reads from standard input, which must provide a single Go source file defining a complete package. With a single directory argument, gotype checks the Go files in that directory, comprising a single package. Use -t to include the (in-package) _test.go files. Use -x to type check only external test files. Otherwise, each path must be the filename of a Go file belonging to the same package. Imports are processed by importing directly from the source of imported packages (default), or by importing from compiled and installed packages (by setting -c to the respective compiler). The -c flag must be set to a compiler ("gc", "gccgo") when type- checking packages containing imports with relative import paths (import "./mypkg") because the source importer cannot know which files to include for such packages. ` func usage() { fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, usageString) flag.PrintDefaults() os.Exit(2) } func report(err error) { if *panicOnError { panic(err) } scanner.PrintError(os.Stderr, err) if list, ok := err.(scanner.ErrorList); ok { errorCount += len(list) return } errorCount++ } // parse may be called concurrently func parse(filename string, src any) (*ast.File, error) { if *verbose { fmt.Println(filename) } file, err := parser.ParseFile(fset, filename, src, parserMode) // ok to access fset concurrently if *printAST { ast.Print(fset, file) } return file, err } func parseStdin() (*ast.File, error) { src, err := io.ReadAll(os.Stdin) if err != nil { return nil, err } return parse("", src) } func parseFiles(dir string, filenames []string) ([]*ast.File, error) { files := make([]*ast.File, len(filenames)) errors := make([]error, len(filenames)) var wg sync.WaitGroup for i, filename := range filenames { wg.Add(1) go func(i int, filepath string) { defer wg.Done() files[i], errors[i] = parse(filepath, nil) }(i, filepath.Join(dir, filename)) if sequential { wg.Wait() } } wg.Wait() // If there are errors, return the first one for deterministic results. var first error for _, err := range errors { if err != nil { first = err // If we have an error, some files may be nil. // Remove them. (The go/parser always returns // a possibly partial AST even in the presence // of errors, except if the file doesn't exist // in the first place, in which case it cannot // matter.) i := 0 for _, f := range files { if f != nil { files[i] = f i++ } } files = files[:i] break } } return files, first } func parseDir(dir string) ([]*ast.File, error) { ctxt := build.Default pkginfo, err := ctxt.ImportDir(dir, 0) if _, nogo := err.(*build.NoGoError); err != nil && !nogo { return nil, err } if *xtestFiles { return parseFiles(dir, pkginfo.XTestGoFiles) } filenames := append(pkginfo.GoFiles, pkginfo.CgoFiles...) if *testFiles { filenames = append(filenames, pkginfo.TestGoFiles...) } return parseFiles(dir, filenames) } func getPkgFiles(args []string) ([]*ast.File, error) { if len(args) == 0 { // stdin file, err := parseStdin() if err != nil { return nil, err } return []*ast.File{file}, nil } if len(args) == 1 { // possibly a directory path := args[0] info, err := os.Stat(path) if err != nil { return nil, err } if info.IsDir() { return parseDir(path) } } // list of files return parseFiles("", args) } func checkPkgFiles(files []*ast.File) { type bailout struct{} // if checkPkgFiles is called multiple times, set up conf only once conf := types.Config{ FakeImportC: true, Error: func(err error) { if !*allErrors && errorCount >= 10 { panic(bailout{}) } report(err) }, Importer: importer.ForCompiler(fset, *compiler, nil), Sizes: types.SizesFor(build.Default.Compiler, build.Default.GOARCH), } defer func() { switch p := recover().(type) { case nil, bailout: // normal return or early exit default: // re-panic panic(p) } }() const path = "pkg" // any non-empty string will do for now conf.Check(path, fset, files, nil) } func printStats(d time.Duration) { fileCount := 0 lineCount := 0 fset.Iterate(func(f *token.File) bool { fileCount++ lineCount += f.LineCount() return true }) fmt.Printf( "%s (%d files, %d lines, %d lines/s)\n", d, fileCount, lineCount, int64(float64(lineCount)/d.Seconds()), ) } func main() { flag.Usage = usage flag.Parse() initParserMode() start := time.Now() files, err := getPkgFiles(flag.Args()) if err != nil { report(err) // ok to continue (files may be empty, but not nil) } checkPkgFiles(files) if errorCount > 0 { os.Exit(2) } if *verbose { printStats(time.Since(start)) } }